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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page annotated bibliography, the writer discusses the content of sources that deal with the problem of health record keeping for military personnel and how a computerized system is addressing this problem. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khanbimi.rtf.
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
to the hectic and chaotic nature of combat. As Hunt (2005) points out, it is quite possible for a wounded soldier to receive emergency surgery in one location and then
to be flown by helicopter to a more secure location, only to have the soldier arrive with no paper medical records to be found and receiving medical personnel at a
loss as to what to do next. The following annotated bibliography examines sources that pertain to this topic and which explain the problem in greater detail, as well as what
steps have been taken to correct it. DODs patient management system continues expansion throughout military medical facilities. (2005, October 1). [Electronic version]. Military Medicine, p. 3. This
article refers to the DOD system simply as "electronic health records" (EHR) and offers further details on its expansion to-date. By this point, 80 percent of the records had been
transferred to the new system and the various military medical professionals (Army, Navy and Air Force) were anticipating the system being complete by 2006, at which time, it would be
accessible by roughly 60,000 military health care providers in the US and eleven other countries. The article goes on to relate how training programs for the use of the system
are being planned and how the system is already being extensively used. This allows medical personnel to spend more time on care delivery and less time trying to ascertain test
results. Electronic records for military health system. (2006, February 1). All Hands, pp. 7-9. This brief article relates how the DOD achieved a "major milestone" with its
"Armed Forces Health Longitudinal Technology Application" (AHLTA), which is the "largest, most significant electronic health record system of its kind" (Electronic, 2006, p. 7). This article substantiates figures concerning the
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