The Social and Technical Context of Health Informatics
Instructor: Harold P. Lehmann, MD, Ph.D.
Beginner Level • 9 hours to complete • Flexible Schedule
What You'll Learn
- Articulate a coherent problem definition of, and a plan for addressing, a healthcare informatics problem.
- Create an Informatics Stack analysis of an informatics problem.
- Describe eleven socio-technical aspects of a health informatics problem or solution.
Skills You'll Gain
Health Technology
Health Care
Health Care Procedure and Regulation
Medical Imaging
Data Literacy
Information Privacy
Health Policy
Health Information Management
System Requirements
Information Technology
Electronic Medical Record
Interoperability
Emerging Technologies
Technology Strategies
Health Informatics
Healthcare Industry Knowledge
Shareable Certificate
Earn a shareable certificate to add to your LinkedIn profile
Outcomes
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Learn new concepts from industry experts
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Gain a foundational understanding of a subject or tool
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Develop job-relevant skills with hands-on projects
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Earn a shareable career certificate
There are 4 modules in this course
In this module, you will be given an introduction to the course and its foundational concepts. After providing examples of health IT in the contexts of patients, providers, and populations—the three contexts we always return to—we articulate the drivers that motivate developments in health IT and informatics. We then provide the core definitions of key terms (like “health IT” and “informatics”) and introduce the core framework for your work in this course, the Informatics Stack.
In this module, we start our journey down the Stack to explain the world of informatics and health IT. We explore the top four levels of the Stack (World, Organization, Roles, and Functions), and then proceed to discuss new US medical-care (“World”) policies that drive health care Organizations to change practice, so they can accomplish their core Functions. We also discuss the history of health IT in relation to such policies in the past. We begin a course-long discussion of interoperability (which occurs at each level of the Stack), and privacy/confidentiality/security. We end with an explication of methods used to Evaluate whether an IT project has achieved the Organizational goals set for that project.
In this module, we continue the journey, starting with the role of needs, requirements, and specifications. We then turn to how workflow issues are turned into requirements and how information systems, built to satisfy those requirements, are assembled. We close with the cautionary notes of how poorly built systems harm the very workflows they were designed to improve.
This module concludes our journey with discussions of Data, Information, Knowledge, and Technology. Regarding data, we discuss their sources and types and provide examples. We go on to explain differences between information and data, and between knowledge and information. Standards are most important at this level, and we discuss the exchange of text and imaging data. Regarding technology, we use the Hype Cycle as a way for you to keep track of what new technologies are doing what and when. We close with a framework for thinking about careers in health IT and informatics.