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an educational resource for health informatics in
general practice
The New NHS sets a premium on high quality information
to support patient care.1 This requirement has been
recognised through the publication of NHS strategy documents on
information.
2 3
Emerging from these policy initiatives is
the need for high quality health data accessible through electronic
patient record systems.4 The quality of general practice
data will underpin clinical care, practice payments, clinical
governance, assessment of health needs, commissioning, and even
professional reaccreditation. These policy initiatives have been
accompanied by the emergence of the new discipline of health
informatics in the academic curriculum and a clear need to develop
training in informatics.5
The Informatics Educational Resource (IER) is a set of resources
designed to support learning and teaching in health informatics. The
material has been developed iteratively, taking feedback from several
sources. Originally prepared for general practitioner registrars in
Yorkshire, the IER can be used in different contexts throughout the
NHS. In the past two years, IER development has been supported by a
grant from the Academy of Colleges Information Group. The IER is not a
course or a specification for a qualification, but a set of resources
that assist different types of learning needs in different contexts.
The IER defines what needs to be learnt and taught, provides material
that supports this learning, and makes available other material (via
links on the IER website).
The IER is one solution to the problems posed by Learning to
Manage Health Information.5 It covers all the
subjects set out in that document and places additional emphasis on
interpersonal communication and use of computers during medical
consultations. We use and develop examples of audit in the IER to help
trainees develop their informatics skills with "real world"
problems. This is one of several pathways through the material. The IER
has been modified by feedback from trainees and teachers in the
Yorkshire Deanery, and we run an annual course for general practitioner educators in Yorkshire based around the IER material. The IER project
and material was presented at the London conference of the Academy of
Colleges Information Group ("Learning to manage health information
practically") in September 2000.6
We believe that the IER provides a framework for teaching health
informatics in a variety of settings. We stress that health informatics
skills are an integral part of clinicians' everyday working practice
and informatics is (at least) as much about person to person
communication as it is about technical skills. We recommend that
Fisher Medical Centre, Millfields, Skipton BD23
1EU (alan.hassey{at}btinternet.com)
Paul Robinson The Surgery, Snainton, Scarborough YO13 9AF
Footnotes
The IER website (http://128.240.23.108/eprval/) is hosted by the Sowerby Centre for Health Informatics in Newcastle (SCHIN).
Funding: The IER was developed with the help of a grant from the Academy of Colleges Information Group (ACIG). The Fisher Medical Centre receives "Support for science" funding from Northern and Yorkshire Region of the NHS Executive.
References
| 1. | Secretary of State for Health. The new NHS: modern, dependable. London: Stationery Office, 1997. (Cm 3807.) |
| 2. | NHS Executive. Information for health: an information strategy for the modern NHS 1998-2005. Leeds: NHS Executive, 1998. |
| 3. | Department of Health. Building the information core: implementing the NHS Plan. London: DoH, 2001. |
| 4. | NHS Information Authority. PRIMIS (Primary Care Information Services). www.primis.nottingham.ac.uk/ (accessed 22 Oct 2001). |
| 5. | Severs M, Pearson S. Learning to manage health information: a theme for clinical education. Bristol: NHS Executive (South and West), 1999. |
| 6. | Academy of Colleges Information Group. Conference report: Learning to manage health information practically. London: ACIG, 2000. (http://www.aomrc.org.uk/V2acig.pdf) |
Israeli students are refusing to perform intimate examinations on anaesthetised women without their informed consent.