Home » AN ELECTRONIC PATIENT DATA SCHEDULING SYSTEM

AN ELECTRONIC PATIENT DATA SCHEDULING SYSTEM

CHAPTER ONE

INTRODUCTION

1.1   Background of the Study

According to Lisker, (2007) an Electronic Patient Management Information System is any tool used to assist in the delivery of clinical care from point of care initiation to completion. The tools include computer based attendance scheme for patient, payment processing software and informationtechnology systems, blood group and genotype to avoid test result mismatch of data.Electronic based attendance scheme for Patients is used by hospital to create process and record their attendance scheme for patient’s information. This system is used to calculate the nurse punctuate to work. It’s an effective tool in the hands of the hospital management. Lisker,(2007).

Duty is a term that conveys a sense of moral commitment to someone or something. The moral commitment is the sort that results in action, and it is not a matter of passive feelings or mere recognition. When someone recognizes a duty, that person commits himself/herself to the cause involved without considering the self-interesting courses of actions that may have been relevant previously. This is not to suggest that living a life of duty precludes one from the best sort of life, but duty does involve some sacrifice of immediate self-interest. Cicero is an early philosopher who acknowledged this possibility. He discusses duty in his work “On Duty”. He suggests that duties can come from four different sources:

       i.            It is a result of being human

     ii.            It is a result of one’s personality place in life (your family, country, and job)

  iii.            One’s own moral expectations for you can generate duties

From the root idea of obligation to serve or give something in return, involved in the conception of duty, have sprung various derivative uses of the word; thus it isused of the services performed by a minister of a church, by a soldier, or by any employee or servant.Arnett, et al. (2006).Nurses today have a broad scope of responsibility as health care providers that require them, under some circumstance, to exercise independent professional judgment. When nurses exercise their judgment negligently, they may be held liable because courts hold them to a correspondingly higher level of accountability.Nurses have been held liable for their failure to monitor and/or promptly respond to patients by informing physicians of significant changes in patient’s condition. Under these types of circumstance, nurses have an affirmative duty to exercise their professional judgment to ensure that all adequate steps are taken to treat patients appropriately.Arnett, et al. (2006).