Modeling a Health Care Enterprise

Internship Report - Summer 2006 The federal government is responsible for the direct or indirect medical care of nearly a million people. It is the fifth largest jurisdiction in Canada. Certain groups, such as members of the military, inmates at federal institutions and First Nations peoples, are ei...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sheardown, Chris
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10222/14877
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Summary:Internship Report - Summer 2006 The federal government is responsible for the direct or indirect medical care of nearly a million people. It is the fifth largest jurisdiction in Canada. Certain groups, such as members of the military, inmates at federal institutions and First Nations peoples, are either excluded from the Canada Health Care Act or are provided care through a long standing policy decision. The Federal Healthcare Partnership (FHP) is a partnership of 6 major departments responsible for providing the direct or indirect care. The FHP includes the Department of Defence, Correctional Services Canada, Health Canada, the RCMP, Veteran’s Affairs Canada and Citizenship and Immigration Canada. In an effort to benefit from an electronic system, a few of the departments are currently in the planning or implementation phase of a major health information system. In addition to the individual partner departments, the FHP is currently undertaking an Enterprise Architecture Plan to develop an electronic health record, much like that of Canada Health Infoway, to provide a level of interoperability between the partners and the jurisdictions the partners interact with. The internship at the FHP consisted of one month placements at 3 of the 6 departments with the final month at the FHP. The intern was hosted at the Department of Defence, Correctional Service Canada and the First Nations and Inuit Health Branch of Health Canada. The internship’s main object was to observe and participate in the various major health information system projects within each partner department. Each placement yielded different issues and challenges for research as well as the application of some of the theory learned to date in the form of minor projects. These projects included developing questionnaires as well as technical requirement documents. The main benefit from the internship, though, was the opportunity to observe and compare the different departments undertake similar projects at different points of the project life cycle. From ...