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What is HIMSS?
HIMSS is the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society. It is the healthcare industry's membership organization “exclusively focused on providing leadership for the optimal use of healthcare information technology and management systems for the betterment of human health.” Founded in 1961, HIMSS has offices in Chicago, Washington D.C., and other locations across the country. It represents ~17,000 individual members and some 275 member corporations that employ more than 1 million people. HIMSS frames and leads healthcare public policy and industry practices through advocacy, educational and professional development initiatives. It promotes information and management systems' contributions to ensuring quality patient care.
HIMSS Definition of an EHR:
The Electronic Health Record (EHR)
is a secure, real-time,
point-of-care, patient centric
information resource for
clinicians. The EHR aids
clinicians’ decision making by
providing access to patient
health record information where
and when they need it and by
incorporating evidence-based
decision support. The EHR
automates and streamlines the
clinician’s workflow, closing
loops in communication and
response that result in delays
or gaps in care. The EHR also
supports the collection of data
for other uses than direct
clinical care, such as billing,
quality management, outcomes
reporting, resource planning,
and public health disease
surveillance and reporting.
HIMSS Essential Requirements:
1.
Provides secure, reliable,
real-time access to patient
health record information where
and when it is needed to support
care.
2.
Captures and manages episodic
and longitudinal electronic
health record information.
3.
Functions as clinicians’ primary
information resource during the
provision of patient care.
4.
Assists with the work of
planning and delivering
evidence-based care to
individual and groups of
patients.
5.
Captures data used for
continuous quality improvement,
utilization review, risk
management, resource planning,
and performance management.
6.
Captures the patient health
related information needed for
medical records and
reimbursement.
7.
Provides longitudinal,
appropriately masked information
to support clinical research,
public health reporting, and
population health initiatives.
8.
Supports clinical trials and
evidence-based research.
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