YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :The Health Care Industry and Information Technologies
Essays 631 - 660
to inappropriate individuals or departments. This can perhaps best be illustrated by looking at the use of IT within a corporate s...
where there is reduced access and denial of necessary services to patients in general (Lens, 2002). This situation causes increa...
field of medicine was not a very stable one, with almost anyone hanging out a shingle and calling themselves a doctor (American Me...
had occurred during the meetings. The two companies were very different in their approach to business. They sought to comp...
regimes and goals are instituted to bring about change that is viewed to be best for the people involved (Oberle and Allen, 2002)....
are intrinsically connected to behaviors that cope with stress factors in the environment (Roy, 1999). The goal within this nursi...
But Romanov notes that the problem with todays system is that family care and primary care physicians are little more than gatekee...
keep an eye on in this industry are the financial collapse (which well discuss in greater detail below) and mergers and acquisitio...
"is a 32-bit, multitasking, multiprocessing virtual memory operating system" (Article 73391, 2001). OpenVMS Alpha is the 64-bit v...
chain, they are firm infrastructure, human resource management, technological development and procurement (Porter, 1985). At all l...
loaded onto his computer and being spied on for a short time by coworkers. Jackson (2001) was able not only to gain access...
and also who it is that will be using the system and who it is that this use will impact on, for example, in a hospital this will ...
criticized for cutting costs when it comes to health care delivery. For another thing, consumers generally make a choice o...
struggled with the shift to maintain services and provide support for this population. There is little dispute that the aggrega...
a component of DSS has led to the development of a general framework for the integration of both DSS and software agents. These r...
ethical, philosophical, and moral issues that characterize the one delivery mechanism also characterize the other. A particular c...
meaning is larger than this Henderson (2002), describes this as the difference between the information literate and the informatio...
of the marketplace by big business (Bittlingmayer, 2002). Catanzaro (2000) accuses President Richard Nixon of using antitrust law ...
short-staffed and were woefully short on funds. Other features of the means by which one of Exeters systems was automated a...
over the decades--people can opt to purchase lower priced vehicles or do without. They may own homes and cars already. Life is aff...
advance at the time, but it created the scenario in which those receiving health care were not those paying for health care. As c...
and Millar (1985) noted some 20 years ago that information technology ends up creating a competitive advantage by offering the bus...
advantage in terms of book sellers, and is a good example of how IT can be used to create competitive advantage (Kotler, 2003). ...
been favorable to increased privileges for pharmacists. This trend towards increased privileges are certainly understandable give...
which both of those impacts are important. The question of what statistics should be collected in a medical facility, however, is...
promote recovery and to "replace unnecessary institutional care with efficient, effective community service that people can count ...
In this way, Buddhism became accessible to all, and was able to develop the concept of community which...
are almost always upheld by the courts. Nevertheless, this does not give government unlimited power to dictate public behavior, as...
of a celebritys medical information and so on, there has been prompt attention to security by the law. There are many situations ...
a predicable change as may be expected if we were to apply the theories of Clark (et al, 1988). In terms of identify there are m...