(In)Secure Communication, health and medicine
I’m trying to learn for my Health & Medical class and I’m stuck. Can you help?
Look at the case study number one, (In)Secure Communication? on page 240 of Health Policy and Politics, A Nurses Guide, by Milstead. Analyze what might have transpired if Annie did not have a nursing background. List the breakdowns in communication that occurred and the potential ramifications. Did the advance practice nurse’s office fulfill a meaningful use stage 2 requirements of providing secure electronic communication between the patient and healthcare provider? Why or why not?
Case Study
Annie Lewis, a registered nurse, takes a prescribed daily beta blocker to combat a rapid heart rate. Annie was running low with no refills on her prescription, so she called her primary care provider APRN, who provided her with a month’s supply. At the same time, Annie scheduled her yearly wellness visit. When Annie arrived at the APRN’s office, she was given instructions to access her records in the prac-tice’s new electronic record so she, the patient, could receive results and messages in a timely manner. Annie was examined, had rou-tine labwork completed, and requested a refill of her beta blocker, although she did tell the APRN that she still had some medication remaining, so she wouldn’t need the prescription called in yet. After about 2 days, Annie received her first email alerting her that there was new information in her electronic record. When she accessed the record, she found a narrative of her visit, with a diagnosis of dysuria. The next day another email arrived, and she found that her urine had been sent for a culture and came back positive, although she had no symptoms of a UTI. The day after that lab result, Annie received an automated call from the pharmacy that her prescription was ready. Thinking that the APRN had filled her beta blocker prescription early, she was tempted to ignore the pharmacy call. However, Annie did call the pharmacy and she learned that the prescription waiting for pickup was an antibiotic, apparently for her UTI. Knowing that it was a hassle to call regarding this, Annie decided to pick up the antibiotic and begin therapy, because she knew how to read the lab tests and assumed she should be treated for the UTI, despite having no physi-cal symptoms. Annie never had any phone conversations with anyone from the APRN’s office after her well-visit appointment. Another fac-tor to note: the urine sample was collected in the APRN’s office, not the lab, where Annie had labeled the specimen container in the lava-tory using a black marker . Copyright | Jones & Bartlett Learning | Health Policy and Politics | Edition 5 | adanursingservices@gmail.com | Printed from www.chegg.com