Medical information systems ethics

The exponential digitization of medical data has led to a transformation of the practice of medicine. This change notably raises a new complexity of issues surrounding health IT. The proper use of these communication tools, such as telemedicine, e-health, m-health the big medical data, should improv...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Otros Autores: Béranger, Jérôme, author (author)
Formato: Libro electrónico
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: London, England ; Hoboken, New Jersey : ISTE 2015.
Edición:1st edition
Colección:Information systems, web and pervasive computing series.
Materias:
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull:https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009629684306719
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; Introduction; I.1. Questions on which our study is based; I.2. Objectives and contributions of this book; I.3. Toward medical ethics; I.3.1. Sources that feed our ethical reflections; I.3.2. The Hippocratic Oath at the root of medical ethics; I.3.3. Ethical reflection centered on principles and adjusted by rules; I.3.3.1. Four universal ethical principles; I.3.3.2. Six ethical rules; 1: The Emergence of Medical Information in the Face of Personal and Societal Ethical Challenges; 1.1. An information-consuming society
  • 1.2. e-Health, m-health, the Quantified Self and Big Data 1.3. Medical secrecy in the face of the computerization of healthcare data; 1.3.1. Regulatory characteristics of medical secrecy; 1.3.2. Protection of healthcare data; 1.4. Cultural evolution of mentalities surrounding legitimacy of information; 1.5. Processing of personal data in law; 1.5.1. European regulations concerning the processing of medical data; 1.5.1.1. Directive 95/46 CE of the European Parliament and Council; 1.5.1.2. European and EU instruments protecting private life
  • 1.5.2. American legal framework surrounding personal healthcare data 1.5.3. Laws pertaining to personal data in Asia; 1.5.3.1. In Japan; 1.5.3.2. In China; 2: Ethical Modeling: From the Design to the Use of an Information System; 2.1. Info-ethics: data on practical wisdom; 2.1.1. Epistemological illumination around the pyramid of knowledge; 2.1.2. From data to knowledge through an information system; 2.1.3. Quality and choice of medical information; 2.1.3.1. Indicators of data quality; 2.1.3.2. Criteria for improving the quality of medical information
  • 2.2. Identification of method used to develop the ethical analysis model 2.3. Development of the ethical analysis space; 2.4. Presentation of the ethical model; 2.4.1. Ethical cube of an accepted contingency; 2.4.2. Ethical model of information system in the doctor-patient relationship; 2.4.3. Ethical modeling of medical communication; 2.4.4. Process of creation of practical wisdom via neo-Platonic systemic ethical modeling; 2.4.5. Ethical inductive algorithmic governance (Ψ, G, Φ); 2.4.6. Toward a selective ranking of medical data; 3: Uses of this Ethical Model
  • 3.1. Implementing the ethical model 3.1.1. Implementing the model on the major aims of an information system; 3.1.2. Implementation of the model in the general creation of an information system; 3.2. Presentation of the study's questionnaires; 3.3. Necessary environmental changes for healthcare information systems: recommendations and actions; 3.3.1. From a structural and technological perspective; 3.3.2. From a strategic and methodological perspective; 3.3.3. From an organizational and regulatory perspective; 3.3.4. From a relational and cultural perspective
  • 3.4. Creating an ethical charter on the "ideal" computational tool for a healthcare establishment