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(BQ) Part 2 book “Nursing informatics and the foundation of knowledge” hass contents: Patient engagement and connected health, using informatics to promote community/population health, data mining as a research tool, bioinformatics, biomedical informatics, and computational biology, and other contents. | SECTION IV: Nursing Informatics Practice Applications: Care Delivery Chapter 14 The Electronic Health Record and Clinical Informatics Chapter 15 Informatics Tools to Promote Patient Safety and Quality Outcomes Chapter 16 Patient Engagement and Connected Health Chapter 17 Using Informatics to Promote Community/Population Health Chapter 18 Telenursing and Remote Access Telehealth Nursing information systems must support nurses as they fulfill their roles in delivering quality patient care. Such systems must be responsive to nurses’ needs, allowing them to manage their data and information as needed and providing access to necessary references, literature sources, and other networked departments. Nurses have always practiced in a field where they have needed to use their ingenuity, resourcefulness, creativity, initiative, and skills. To improve patient care and advance the science of nursing, clinicians as knowledge workers must apply these same abilities and skills to become astute users of available information systems. In this section, the reader learns about clinical practice tools, electronic health records, and clinical information systems; informatics tools to enhance patient safety, provide consumer information, and meet education needs; population and community health tools; and telehealth and telenursing. Information systems, electronic documentation, and electronic health records are changing the way nurses and physicians practice. Nursing informatics systems are also changing how patients enter and receive data and information. Some institutions, for example, are permitting patients to access their own records electronically via the Internet or a dedicated patient portal. Confidentiality and privacy issues loom with these new electronic systems. HIPAA regulations (covered in the Perspectives on Nursing Informatics section) and professional ethics principles (covered in the Building Blocks of Nursing Informatics section) must remain at the forefront when