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Nurs Admin Q Vol. 38, No. 2, pp. 189–191 c 2014 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Copyright 

Nursing Informatics

Nursing Education Focus of Nursing Informatics Research in 2013 Jane M. Carrington, PhD, RN; Victoria L. Tiase, MSN, RN; Nicolette Estrada, PhD, RN; Kimberly D. Shea, PhD, RN The Nursing Informatics Year in Review 2013 revealed an increase in publications associated with nursing education. Specifically, the articles addressed technology in nursing curricula, use of technology to teach nursing education, and use of technology to form collaborative relationships. In this article we present questions such as: how do these programs assist student nurses to transition to nurse providers where technology is infused into their work and workflow and what is the influence of the collaborative relationships with nurse educators, administrators, and informatics specialists increase patient safety and quality. Key words: informatics, nursing administration, nursing education, nursing informatics

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HE FORCES of change in our nation’s delivery of health care and the push for technology to accompany these changes have highlighted the importance of informatics. The impact is evident and represented in results from 2 nursing informatics systematic

Author Affiliations: College of Nursing, The University of Arizona, Tucson (Drs Carrington and Shea); Department of Information Technology, New York-Presbyterian Hospital (Ms Tiase); ACNS/Research, VA Salt Lake City Health Care System, Utah (Dr Estrada); College of Nursing, University of Utah, Salt Lake City (Dr Estrada); and Biomedical Informatics Department, Uniform Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland (Dr Estrada). The information in this column was presented in part at the American Medical Informatics Association fall meeting during the Nursing Informatics Working Group special session, 2013. The authors thank Roy Simpson, DNP, RN, DPNAP, FAAN, for his support for publication of this work. The authors declare no conflict of interest. Correspondence: Jane M. Carrington, PhD, RN, College of Nursing, University of Arizona, PO Box 210203, 1305 N. Martin Ave, Tucson, AZ 85745 ([email protected]). DOI: 10.1097/NAQ.0000000000000024

literature reviews. A systematic literature review was completed in 20121 and repeated in 2013, using “nursing informatics” and “informatics” as key search terms and limiting the results to “research” that identified a nurse as the first author. The aim of each review was to examine the state of the science of nursing informatics based on a retrospective review of the past year of nursing informatics publications. The ultimate goal was to showcase the scope and variety of nursing research published in the past year. The full description of the 2013 review will be presented in a future publication. The most intriguing difference between the 2 searches is the increase in articles describing both techniques for teaching students to use technology and methods for using technology to enhance learning. The number of articles categorized with a subject area of education and research setting indicated as school, hospital, or online impressively doubled from 2012 to 2013. The articles that emerged included the incorporation of technology in nursing curricula,2-4 use of technology to teach nursing courses,5-14 and methods for forging 189

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collaboration and partnerships.15,16 Arguably, these articles, and the work that inspired them, reflect both mastery and creativity in using technology for education. We contend that this work was the result of the push by the American Association of Colleges of Nursing and the publication of the DNP and baccalaureate essentials for nursing education. Within the aforementioned essentials, information systems/technology and patient care technology to improve patient outcomes were included.17,18 Nursing administrators, educators, and informatics specialists together can build on this work by exploring the transition of graduate nurses into a technology-rich health care environment. Specifically, we need to ask how adept graduate nurses are with the use of health care technology to increase patient safety and quality care. We call on nursing administrators to work with nurse educators to achieve and maximize collaboration toward

the infusion of technology into practice. This needs to occur in a meaningful way that increases patient safety and quality. We applaud the inclusion of a nursing informatics expert with this collaboration. We intend to continue performing a review of the literature associated with nursing informatics and informatics every year. Reviewing the literature each year reveals subtle changes and influences in the state of the science of nursing informatics. In 2013, there was am emergence of literature describing curriculum changes, methods of teaching, and collaboration using technology. There is evidence that educators are working to meet the demand for graduate nurses and advance practice nurses so that they can become proficient users of health care technology. We urge educators to continue to publish the results of their innovative approaches as well as to take action to increase collaboration with nursing administrators.

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Nursing Education Focus of Nursing Informatics Research in 2013 15. Merrill JA, Yoon S, Larson E, Honig J, Reame N. Using social network analysis to examine collaborative relationships among PhD and DNP students and faculty in a research-intensive university school of nursing [published online ahead of print October 1, 2012]. Nurs Outlook. 2013;61(2):109-116. doi:10.1016/j.outlook.2012.08.001. 16. Tubbs-Cooley HL, Martsolf DS, Pickler RH, Morrison CF, Wardlaw CE. Development of a regional nursing research partnership for academic and practice collaborations [published online ahead of print July 28,

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Nursing education focus of nursing informatics research in 2013.

The Nursing Informatics Year in Review 2013 revealed an increase in publications associated with nursing education. Specifically, the articles address...
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