• Aust Health Rev · May 2011

    Clinical informatics: a workforce priority for 21st century healthcare.

    • Susan E Smith, Lesley E Drake, Julie-Gai B Harris, Kay Watson, and Peter G Pohlner.
    • Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, The Prince Charles Hospital, Rode Road, Chermside, QLD 4032, Australia. susan_e_smith@health.qld.gov.au
    • Aust Health Rev. 2011 May 1; 35 (2): 130-5.

    AbstractThis paper identifies the contribution of health and clinical informatics in the support of healthcare in the 21st century. Although little is known about the health and clinical informatics workforce, there is widespread recognition that the health informatics workforce will require significant expansion to support national eHealth work agendas. Workforce issues including discipline definition and self-identification, formal professionalisation, weaknesses in training and education, multidisciplinarity and interprofessional tensions, career structure, managerial support, and financial allocation play a critical role in facilitating or hindering the development of a workforce that is capable of realising the benefits to be gained from eHealth in general and clinical informatics in particular. As well as the national coordination of higher level policies, local support of training and allocation of sufficient position hours in appropriately defined roles by executive and clinical managers is essential to develop the health and clinical informatics workforce and achieve the anticipated results from evolving eHealth initiatives.

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