This article defines Health Informatics as the interdisciplinary field that applies information technology, data science, and communications methods to the collection, storage, analysis, sharing, and use of health-related data for clinical care, research, administration, and public health. Electronic health records (EHRs) are digital versions of patients’ paper charts that contain medical history, diagnoses, medications, laboratory results, imaging reports, and treatment plans, accessible in real-time to authorised users. Core features: (1) structured data capture (coded entries using standard terminologies – SNOMED CT, LOINC, ICD-10/11, RxNorm), (2) clinical decision support (CDS) (alerts, reminders, clinical guidelines, order sets), (3) order entry (computerised physician order entry – CPOE, for medications, laboratory tests, imaging, referrals), (4) results viewing and documentation (laboratory trends, radiology reports, clinical notes), (5) interoperability (exchange of health information across different EHR systems, settings, and organisations). The article addresses: stated objectives of health informatics; key concepts including meaningful use, interoperability standards (HL7 FHIR, DICOM), and data privacy (HIPAA, GDPR); core mechanisms such as clinical decision support rules, patient portals, and health information exchange (HIE); international comparisons and debated issues (EHR usability and physician burnout, interoperability challenges, Return on Investment); summary and emerging trends (artificial intelligence in EHRs, patient-generated data integration, blockchain); and a Q&A section.
This article describes health informatics and electronic health records without endorsing specific commercial systems. Objectives commonly cited: improving the quality, safety, and efficiency of healthcare; reducing medication errors and adverse drug events; facilitating clinical research (secondary use of data); supporting population health management; and enabling patient engagement. The article notes that EHR adoption has increased substantially over the past two decades (80-95% of hospitals in high-income countries), but implementation challenges and unintended consequences remain.
Key terminology:
Historical context: 1960s-70s: early hospital information systems (Mayo Clinic, LDS Hospital). 1990s: Institute of Medicine report “The Computer-Based Patient Record” (1991). 2000s: US government initiatives (Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health – HITECH Act, 2009, providing $30 billion for EHR adoption). 2010s: Meaningful Use program, ICD-10 transition (US), EU eHealth Action Plan. 2020s: AI integration, FHIR momentum.
EHR functional components:
Clinical decision support mechanisms:
Interoperability architectures:
Data standards (selected):
Effectiveness evidence:
International EHR adoption (hospital settings, estimates):
| Country/Region | Acute care hospitals (percentage using basic EHR) | National patient identifier? | Core interoperability framework |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 96% (post-HITECH, 2020) | No (voluntary) | FHIR, eHealth Exchange |
| United Kingdom | 99% (NHS) | NHS Number | FHIR, GP Connect |
| Denmark | 100% | CPR number | National shared records system |
| Canada | 80-85% | None federal (provincial) | Provincial eHealth systems |
| Germany | 85% (growing) | Personal identification number (optional) | gematik (TI) |
Debated issues:
Summary: Health informatics applies IT to healthcare data. EHRs with CPOE and CDS reduce medication errors (50-70%). Interoperability standards (FHIR) enable data exchange but gaps persist. EHR usability remains a challenge associated with clinician burnout. ROI is mixed; non-financial benefits are significant.
Emerging trends:
Q1: What is the difference between an EHR and an EMR?
A: Electronic medical record (EMR) is a narrower term – digital version of patient chart within a single organisation (e.g., hospital or clinic). Electronic health record (EHR) is broader – longitudinal record spanning multiple organisations, ideally accessible across care settings. In practice, terms are often used interchangeably.
Q2: Can patients access their own electronic health records?
A: In many countries (US, EU, UK, Canada, Australia), patients have the right to access their EHR data, typically through secure patient portals (e.g., MyChart, Patient Access, NHS App). Scope varies – some provide full notes, test results, problem lists; others provide summary data only.
Q3: Do EHRs improve quality of care?
A: Yes, for specific processes (e.g., prescribing safety, immunisation tracking, guideline adherence) with moderate evidence. Effect on mortality and major morbidity is uncertain; large observational studies show mixed results, likely because many factors beyond EHRs affect outcomes.
Q4: How are privacy and security maintained with EHRs?
A: Technical safeguards (encryption, access logs, role-based permissions). Administrative safeguards (policies, training, audit trails). Legal safeguards (patient consent requirements, data breach notification laws, penalties for unauthorised access). Despite these, data breaches occur (estimated 10-20% of hospitals experience a breach in any 2-year period).
https://www.healthit.gov/topic/health-it-basics/what-are-electronic-health-records
https://www.hl7.org/fhir/
https://www.who.int/health-informatics
https://www.ehealth.gov.au/
https://www.efmi.org/
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