The adoption of PDAs and mobile communication is expected to provide a solution to the use of computer technology by healthcare workers at the point-of-care. The Australian National Health Information Strategy, Health Online, is providing national leadership for approaches to address the quality and availability of information to assist in the planning and delivery of care. One area for potential growth is the availability and capture of information at the point of care by healthcare providers. A key factor in the lack of adoption of systems, is that traditionally health care information systems have been designed for desktop computing whereas many healthcare workers are highly mobile. This paper discusses phase one of a larger, four-phase...
Recent advances in the hardware of handheld devices, opened up the way for newer applications in the...
One of the emerging technologies is wireless handheld technology and implication of these devices is...
The research questions, "As an Australian, can we expect fully Mobile Technology integrated health c...
The adoption of PDAs and mobile communication is expected to provide a solution to the use of comput...
Clinical information systems for Ambulatory Care are predominantly paper-based. This paper represent...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Information Technology.NO FULL TEXT AVAILABLE. Access i...
A paradigm shift is underway towards the acceptance and utility of Personal Digital Assistant (PDA) ...
From a clinical perspective, the use of mobile technologies such as Personal Digital Assistants (PDA...
This paper examines the role of wireless handheld devices such as PDAs and smartphones in the Austra...
The technology sector of healthcare is entering a new evolutionary phase. The medical community has ...
From a clinical perspective, the use of mobile technologies such as Personal Digital Assistants (PDA...
The inadequate availability of medical information has often made health care services in many deve...
The business drivers within managed care are mandating that physicians have point-of-care access to ...
This paper represents an overview of a field trial for a patient data management system used in am...
Thesis (S.M.)--Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, 2004."June 2004."Includes bib...
Recent advances in the hardware of handheld devices, opened up the way for newer applications in the...
One of the emerging technologies is wireless handheld technology and implication of these devices is...
The research questions, "As an Australian, can we expect fully Mobile Technology integrated health c...
The adoption of PDAs and mobile communication is expected to provide a solution to the use of comput...
Clinical information systems for Ambulatory Care are predominantly paper-based. This paper represent...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Information Technology.NO FULL TEXT AVAILABLE. Access i...
A paradigm shift is underway towards the acceptance and utility of Personal Digital Assistant (PDA) ...
From a clinical perspective, the use of mobile technologies such as Personal Digital Assistants (PDA...
This paper examines the role of wireless handheld devices such as PDAs and smartphones in the Austra...
The technology sector of healthcare is entering a new evolutionary phase. The medical community has ...
From a clinical perspective, the use of mobile technologies such as Personal Digital Assistants (PDA...
The inadequate availability of medical information has often made health care services in many deve...
The business drivers within managed care are mandating that physicians have point-of-care access to ...
This paper represents an overview of a field trial for a patient data management system used in am...
Thesis (S.M.)--Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, 2004."June 2004."Includes bib...
Recent advances in the hardware of handheld devices, opened up the way for newer applications in the...
One of the emerging technologies is wireless handheld technology and implication of these devices is...
The research questions, "As an Australian, can we expect fully Mobile Technology integrated health c...