2. Workshop format
• Perspectives
–HI in general
–IT
–Other Health Professions
–Academic and Operational
• Interactive session
• Feedback and Next Steps
3. INFORMATICS
(IT, IM and Information
HEALTH INFORMATICS Science)
COMMUNITY
Knowledge
ICT, IT, Management
Portfolio
incl
Programme Information
Computer
Project Management
Science /
Management Managing
studies
HI
Clinical Health Services
Education
Informatics Records
Training
+ User Management
Development
Experience
Research
HEALTH Note : ALL
constituencies have
public &private
health, academic and
commercial existences
4. Stating the Obvious?
• Delivering support to complex care by multi-
professional / cross-sectoral organisations, 24/7
• Informatics increasingly recognised as a core function
of the NHS and other care delivery bodies.
“informatics staff involved in the production and operation of major eHealth
developments aimed at supporting more effective healthcare services in many
countries must be ‘fit to practice’ professionals”
• Informatics is more business critical every year
5. Vision: Health Informatics to be
recognised as a valued profession
globally
• Promoting advancement and dissemination of knowledge
about health informatics
• Defining and agreeing standards of professional conduct
and competence required of people working in health
informatics
• Publishing and maintaining an open register of health
informatics professionals in or for the UK and …?
• Demonstrating its own professional authority and
legitimacy through assurance of its own processes and
procedures
6. Over-arching challenge
• All persons who spend a substantial
proportion of their role or time working in
health informatics
• in or for the <geography> should be registered
with <xx>CHIP and thereby
• certified as professionals
• who meet defined standards of professional
conduct and competence
• on an ongoing basis
7. HI-specific Issues to consider
• Brand, scope and scale of Health Informatics
– A ‘Confusion’ of workforce standards
• Senior buy-in to recognising professionalism
• Priority to get working systems and solutions
• Decision support is a ‘given’ until quality is
challenged – tradition of ‘blame the computer’
• Proving Value: risk to ‘not direct patient care’
• Pace of Change
• Self-worth
Notas del editor
eHealth covers –CISTelemedicine and Home careIntegrated health information networks and EPR systems etcSecondary uses of data for research and billing ------- and the professionals involved in handling information / operating systems in these areas NEED to be certified as professionals – and can (mostly) be accommodated in these constituencies