Latest from HIMJ

  • Andrea Gall
  • April 27, 2022

Latest from HIMJ

Since the March edition of HIMAA Matters, HIMJ has published two online-first articles, and the May Issue of HIMJ.

 

HIMJ Volume 51, No 2 (May 2022) includes:

 

Forum Article  Options to enhance the veracity of Australian health service accreditation assessments

Reece Hinchcliffe, Deborah Debono, David Carter, Miriam Glennie, Hamish Robertson, Joanne Travaglia

 

Review Article  The attributes of hospital-based coronary artery disease registries with a focus on key registry processes; A systematic review

Ali Garavand, Reza Rabiei, Hassan Emami, Mehdi Pishgahi, Mojtaba Vahidi-Asl

 

Professional Practice & Innovation Article  A learning agenda to build the evidence base for strengthening global health information systems

Heidi W Reynolds, Shannon Salentine, Eva Silvestrie, Elizabeth Millare, Ashley Strahley, Abby C Cannon, Emily A Bobrow, Rachel Flynn

 

Research Article  An investigation of the status and maturity of hospitals’ health information Governance in Victoria, Australia

Helen Kwan, Merilyn Riley, Natasha Prasad, Kerin Robinson

 

Research Article  Factors affecting the acceptance of integrated electronic personal health records in Saudi Arabia

Yaser A Alsahafi, Valerie Gay, Adel A Khwaji

 

On-line First articles – a brief summary is provided below:

  

Research Article  The historiography of a profession: The societal and political drivers of the health information management profession in Australia

Kerin Robinson, Simon Barraclough, Elizabeth Cummings, Rick Iedema .

Dec 18, 2022 | OnlineFirst

This commentary theorises the health information management profession for the first time. Its purpose is to identify and contextualise, via a historiographical account, the societal and political drivers that have shaped contemporary Australian health information management and HIMs’ scientific work.

 

Research Article  The suitability of government health information assets for secondary use in research: A fit-for-purpose analysis

Merilyn Riley, Kerin Robinson, Monique Kilkenny, Sandra G Leggat, Airley Broomfield, Rohan Elliott.

April 26, 2022 | OnlineFirst

This study his investigated the secondary uses, in research, of population health and administrative datasets (information assets) of the Department of Health (DoH), Victoria, Australia. 

Get in touch

See Past Issues

Archive

Phone: +61 9887 5002
Email: news@himaa.org.au
Level 1, Building 17, 51 Wicks Road North Ryde NSW 2113
Facebook-f Twitter

© 2021 Health Information Management Association of Australia Ltd