What is Nursing Informatics? Nursing informatics (NI) has been evolving for many years and essentially has a variety of definitions. According to Toni Hebda and Patricia Czar (2005), “nursing informatics may be broadly defined as the use of information and computer technology to support all aspects of nursing practice, including direct delivery of care, administration, education, and research” (p. 9). This definition which has been modified several times is the current edition of the NI Scope and Standards of Practice presented by the American Nurses Association (Murphy, 2012, p. 205). The Nursing Economics journal states that in a classical article, nursing informatics is defined as a “combination of nursing, information, and computer sciences to manage and process data into information and knowledge for use in nursing practice” (Murphy, 2012, p. 204). This journal also states that in 2009, the Nursing Informatics Special Interest Group of the International Medical Informatics Association tuned the NI definition by basically stating that the focus of nursing
References: Ericksen, A. (2009). Informatics: the future of nursing. Rn, 72(7), 34-37. Hebda, T., Czar, P., & Mascara, C. (2005). Handbook of informatics for nurses and health care professionals. Upper Saddle River, N.J: Pearson Prentice Hall. Murphy, J. (2010). Nursing informatics: the intersection of nursing, computer, and information sciences. Nursing Economic$, 28(3), 204-207.