A secure web-based approach for accessing transitional health information for people with traumatic brain injury

A web-based transitional health record was created to provide regional healthcare professionals with ubiquitous access to information on people with brain injuries as they move through the healthcare system. Participants included public, private, and community healthcare organizations/providers in E...

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Veröffentlicht in:Computer methods and programs in biomedicine 2006-03, Vol.81 (3), p.213-219
Hauptverfasser: Lemaire, E.D., Deforge, D., Marshall, S., Curran, D.
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container_end_page 219
container_issue 3
container_start_page 213
container_title Computer methods and programs in biomedicine
container_volume 81
creator Lemaire, E.D.
Deforge, D.
Marshall, S.
Curran, D.
description A web-based transitional health record was created to provide regional healthcare professionals with ubiquitous access to information on people with brain injuries as they move through the healthcare system. Participants included public, private, and community healthcare organizations/providers in Eastern Ontario (Canada). One hundred and nineteen service providers and 39 brain injury survivors registered over 6 months. Fifty-eight percent received English and 42% received bilingual services (English–French). Public health providers contacted the regional service coordinator more than private providers (52% urban centres, 26% rural service providers, and 22% both areas). Thirty-five percent of contacts were for technical difficulties, 32% registration inquiries, 21% forms and processes, 6% resources, and 6% education. Seventeen technical enquiries required action by technical support personnel: 41% digital certificates, 29% web forms, and 12% log-in. This web-based approach to clinical information sharing provided access to relevant data as clients moved through or re-entered the health system. Improvements include automated digital certificate management, institutional health records system integration, and more referral tracking tools. More sensitive test data could be accessed on-line with increasing consumer/clinician confidence. In addition to a strong technical infrastructure, human resource issues are a major information security component and require continuing attention to ensure a viable on-line information environment.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.cmpb.2005.11.011
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source MEDLINE; Access via ScienceDirect (Elsevier)
subjects Brain Injuries - pathology
Brain Injuries - therapy
Brain injury
Canada
Computers
Delivery of Health Care
Electronic health record
Health Education
Health Services Accessibility
Health Services Research
Hospital Information Systems
Humans
Information Services
Internet
Language
Medical Records Systems, Computerized
Physical rehabilitation
Quality of Health Care
Software
title A secure web-based approach for accessing transitional health information for people with traumatic brain injury
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