Health Information Management: Concepts, Principles, and Practice is designed to meet the needs of health information administration (HIA) students and educators. The textbook is based on the model curriculum for AHIMA-accredited, four-year HIA programs. The curriculum, developed by AHIMA’s Assembly on Education, mirrors the certification requirements for HIA graduates. The textbook also reflects the information management model recommended by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations -- a model that presents health information management as a concept that encompasses a continuum of activities from collecting patient-specific data to aggregating the data to generate information, comparing the data with data from other sources, and using the data and information as the basis for knowledge development and decision-making support.
Your students will comprehend the material faster because it’s written at the ideal reading level for students in baccalaureate programs. Every chapter allows you to:
Help your students appreciate how major concepts and principles can be applied in real practice-based situations. To accomplish this, each chapter begins with "Theory into Practice," a case study.
Provide formative, immediate feedback with numerous quizzes. The "Check Your Understanding" sections allow students to verify their command of the information presented in each section. The review quizzes included at the end of each chapter allow you and your students to set goals easily and, more importantly, provide a roadmap for achieving them.
Give students an opportunity to apply what they’ve learned by furnishing them with exercises, student activities, and projects. These exercises help develop critical-thinking, problem-solving, and systems-thinking skills so that students will be prepared for their professional future.
Kathleen M. LaTour, MA, RHIA, is an assistant professor and the chair of the department of health information management (HIM) at the College of St. Scholastica in Duluth, Minnesota. She is an active member of the Minnesota Health Information Management Association, where she was selected as the Distinguished Member in 1992. She has served as chair and member of many AHIMA councils and as a member of AHIMA's Board of Directors from 1993 to 1997. She participated in the development of the AHIMA Model Curricula for both bachelor's and master's level programs. She has authored several articles and recently contributed a chapter to Health Information Management Technology: An Applied Approach, a textbook published by AHIMA in 2001.
Shirley Eichenwald Maki, MBA, RHIA, CPHIMS, is an assistant professor and the coordinator of the healthcare informatics and information management graduate programs at the College of St. Scholastica in Duluth, Minnesota. Shirley has been an HIM professional and educator for over thirty years. She is the 2001 recipient of the College of St. Scholastica's Max H. Lavine Award for Teaching Excellence. She is a former president of AHIMA and the recipient of AHIMA's Distinguished Member Award in 1998. Shirley co-authored with Merida Johns, PhD, RHIA, AHIMA's White Paper on the Health and Well-being of HIM Education. She has held the position of director of education and accreditation at AHIMA and has served as an HIM consultant with Pyramid Health Solutions and Quadramed's HIM Division.