Implementation issues for mobile-wireless infrastructure and mobile health care computing devices for a hospital ward setting.

Liza Heslop, Stephen Weeding, Linda Dawson, Julie Fisher, Andrew Howard
Author Information
  1. Liza Heslop: Faculty of Health, Victoria University of Technology, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

Abstract

mWard is a project whose purpose is to enhance existing clinical and administrative decision support and to consider mobile computers, connected via wireless network, for bringing clinical information to the point of care. The mWard project allowed a limited number of users to test and evaluate a selected range of mobile-wireless infrastructure and mobile health care computing devices at the neuroscience ward at Southern Health's Monash Medical Centre, Victoria, Australia. Before the project commenced, the ward had two PC's which were used as terminals by all ward-based staff and numerous multi-disciplinary staff who visited the ward each day. The first stage of the research, outlined in this paper, evaluates a selected range of mobile-wireless infrastructure.

References

  1. J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2005 Jul-Aug;12(4):398-402 [PMID: 15802478]
  2. J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2005 May-Jun;12(3):263-8 [PMID: 15684133]
  3. BMJ. 2000 Dec 2;321(7273):1400-2 [PMID: 11099288]
  4. J Med Syst. 2005 Jun;29(3):259-70 [PMID: 16050081]
  5. Nurs Adm Q. 2005 Oct-Dec;29(4):308-14 [PMID: 16260994]
  6. Int J Med Inform. 2005 Dec;74(11-12):908-16 [PMID: 16099711]
  7. J Telemed Telecare. 2005;11(5):256-60 [PMID: 16035969]
  8. Health Technol Assess. 1998;2(16):iii-ix, 1-274 [PMID: 9919458]

MeSH Term

Computers, Handheld
Hospital Information Systems
Hospital Units
Hospitals, Public
Humans
Local Area Networks
Pilot Projects
Point-of-Care Systems
Victoria

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0wardprojectmobilecaremobile-wirelessinfrastructuremWardclinicalselectedrangehealthcomputingdevicesstaffwhosepurposeenhanceexistingadministrativedecisionsupportconsidercomputersconnectedviawirelessnetworkbringinginformationpointallowedlimitednumberuserstestevaluateneuroscienceSouthernHealth'sMonashMedicalCentreVictoriaAustraliacommencedtwoPC'susedterminalsward-basednumerousmulti-disciplinaryvisiteddayfirststageresearchoutlinedpaperevaluatesImplementationissueshospitalsetting

Similar Articles

Cited By