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  • Book
    [edited by] Susan McBride, Mari Tietze.
    Summary: "This third edition of the book comes out at unprecedented times for global health as the COVID-19 pandemic raged in the United States and around the world with implications for sectors spanning education, practice, and policy. Our focus as we updated chapters for this text was to emphasize the criticality of nursing leadership within interprofessional teams to use technology, data, and information to address the serious gaps that have been identified and exacerbated by the pandemic. The focus: Identify critical lessons and future opportunities for transforming nursing and healthcare. This text continues to represent a unique perspective tying in national goals to achieve safe, efficient quality of care through use of technology. It emphasizes the advanced practice registered nursing role and the importance of the nurses within interprofessional teams addressing patient safety and quality through methods to optimize health information technology. This book emphasizes methods that, when taken into account, will begin to address the challenges and burden of documentation resulting from usability issues with electronic health records (EHRs) and less-than-desirable adoption and implementation. Current evidence related to these challenges are explored throughout the book"-- Provided by publisher.

    Contents:
    Introduction to Health Information Technology in a Policy and Regulatory Environment / Susan McBride and Mari Tietze
    Advanced Practice Roles, High Performing Interprofessional Teams, and the IT-HI Model / Carol J. Bickford and Mari Tietze
    Scientific and Theoretical Foundations for Driving Improvement / Richard Booth, Susan McBride, and Mari Tietze
    National Healthcare Transformation and Information Technology / Liz Johnson, Susan McBride, and Mari Tietze
    Consumer Engagement/Activation Enhanced by Technology / Mari Tietze and Patricia Hinton Walker
    Computers in Healthcare / Susan McBride and Richard E. Gilder
    Electronic Health Records and Point-of-Care Technology / Mary Beth Mitchell and Susan McBride
    Systems Development Life Cycle and Project Management to Optimize Technology / Susan McBride, Susan K. Newbold and David Fulton
    Workflow Redesign in a Quality-Improvement Modality / Susan McBride and Steph Hoelscher
    Evaluation Methods and Strategies for Electronic Health Records / Susan McBride and Mari Tietze
    Electronic Health Records and Health Information Exchanges Providing Value and Results for Patients, Providers, and Healthcare Systems / Anne Kimbol, Susan McBride, and Hewner
    National Standards for Health Information Technology / Susan H. Fenton and Susan McBride
    Public Health Data to Support Healthy Communities in Health Assessment Planning / Sue Pickens, Susan McBride, Steve Miff and Mari Tietze
    Privacy and Security in a Ubiquitous Health Information Technology World / Susan McBride and Jonathan Ishee
    Personal Health Records and Patient Portals / Mari Tietze and Stephanie H. Hoelscher
    Telehealth and Mobile Health / Mari Tietze, Devin McElreath and Georgia A. Brown
    Strategic Thinking in Design and Deployment of Enterprise Data, Reporting, and Analytics / Susan McBride and Sally Barlow
    Data Management and Analytics : The Foundations for Improvement / Susan McBride, Mari Tietze and Sally Barlow
    Clinical Decision Support Systems / Joni S. Padden, Dwayne Hoelscher, Susan McBride, and Mari Tietze
    Health Information Technology and Implications for Patient Safety / Mari Tietze and Susan McBride
    Quality-Improvement Strategies and Essential Tools / Susan McBride and Mari Tietze
    National Prevention Strategy, Population Health, and Health Information Technology / Mari Tietze, Susan McBride and Andrea L. Lorden
    Electronic Clinical Quality Measures : Building an Infrastructure for Success / Michelle Dardis and Susan McBride
    Developing Competencies in Nursing for an Electronic Age of Healthcare / Laura Thomas, Susan McBride, Sharon Decker, Matthew Pierce, and Mari Tietze
    Genomics and Implications for Health Information Technology / Diane C. Seibert and Susan McBride
    Robotics, Artificial Intelligence (AI), Nanotechnology : New and Emerging Technologies with Implications for Nursing Practice / Mari Tietze and Susan McBride
    Advanced Analytics : New and Emerging Methods / Susan McBride, Annette Sobel, Richard Gilder, Wesley Rhodes and Victoria Uti
    Social Media : Ongoing Evolution in Healthcare Delivery / Ryan Chan, Mari Tietze, and Susan McBride
    Enhancing Cybersecurity in New and Emerging Health Informatics Environments / Susan McBride, Annette Sobel, and Wesley Rhodes
    Interprofessional Application of Health Information Technology in Education / Mari Tietze, Chris McClanahan, and David Gibbs.
    Digital Access R2Library 2023
  • Article
    Lange W, Köhler H.
    Dtsch Med Wochenschr. 1978 Nov 24;103(47):1873-7.
    Among various modifications of the Hepanostika test a simple, sensitive and reproducible one is described as being the best. Of 689 sera from patients in a haemodialysis unit 110 had antibodies against HBs antigen in the Hepanostika test and 150 in the Ausab test. Those antibodies which were not demonstrated in the Hepanostika test had a relatively low concentration (mean impulses per minutes 4.3 X NCx). Those sera which were positive in both the Hepanostika and Ausab test contained antibodies in higher concentrations (mean impulse/min 29.5 X NCx). Only 11 of the 689 sera were positive in the migration-electrophoresis test. A particularly advantage of the modified Hepanostika test is that both HBs antigen and antibodies against HBs antigen can be demonstrated simultaneously on the same plate. Using this method 200 sera were examined. The same sera were tested in the Austria-II-125 test for HBs antigen and the Ausab test for antibodies against HBs antigen. The Hepanostika test was positive in five, the Austria test in four sera. According to the Hepanostika test 43 sera contained antibodies against HBs antigen, while 45 did according to the Ausab test. The two that were positive only in the Ausab test were only weakly positive.
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