The current state of Nursing Informatics - an international cross-sectional survey




Laura-Maria Peltonen, Lisiane Pruinelli, Charlene Ronquillo, Raji Nibber, Erika Lozarda Perezmitre, Lorraine
Block, Haley Deforest, Adrienne Lewis, Dari Alhuwail, Samira Ali, Martha K Badger, Gabrielle Jacklin Eler, Mattias Georgsson, Tasneem Islam, Eunjoo Jeon, Hyunggu Jung, Chiu Hsiang Kuo, Raymond Francis R
Sarmiento, Janine Arlette Sommer, Jude Tayaben, Maxim Topaz

PublisherSosiaali- ja terveyshuollon tietojenkäsittely-yhdistys

2019

Finnish Journal of eHealth and eWelfare

Finnish Journal of eHealth and eWelfare

11

3

220

231

1798-0798

1798-0798

https://doi.org/10.23996/fjhw.77584

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/45321267



An international survey to explore current and future trends in Nursing Informatics (NI) was done in 2015. This article explores responses to questions about: what should be done to further develop NI as an independent discipline; existing policies and standards influencing NI; perceived support towards NI as a discipline; and advice from NI specialists to students and emerging professionals.

Nurse and allied health professionals in academia and practice were reached with snowball sampling. Open-ended questions were analysed with thematic content analysis and the mean and standard deviation is reported for the perceived support towards NI (scale ranging from 1 (not at all supportive) to 10 (very supportive)).

A total of 507 respondents from 46 countries responded to the survey. Respondents reported mediocre support towards NI from the environment (M 5.79, SD 2.60). Results showed that NI education needs development to better meet practice demands, that current NI resources seem insufficient, that NI expertise is not used to its full potential in health institutions and the community, and that NI needs to show its value through research and increase visibility to be recognised among stakeholders worldwide.

In conclusion, there is a need to clarify NI as a discipline and a need for strong leadership to impact policy making. An increase in NI teaching at undergraduate level in nursing as well as an increase in postgraduate NI programmes worldwide would better support practice demands. National policies and international white papers in NI are needed to guide resource distribution to better support practice.


Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 16:07