Abstract
Principle 4 of the Pan-Canadian Health Data Charter calls for common standards to enable interoperability, access, and portability of health data. Yet clinically meaningful information, particularly nursing documentation, remains largely unstructured and siloed across care settings. This article argues that nursing data represent a critical but under-leveraged asset for improving patient safety and continuity of care, as it captures early indicators of deterioration, functional decline, and social context often absent from structured datasets. While traditional approaches to standardization have relied on behavioural change, emerging Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools offer a practical alternative by translating narrative documentation into standardized, interoperable formats. Drawing on institutional examples and current evidence, the article examines the possibilities and potential benefits of leveraging AI to fully realize the promise of common standards in practice without creating undue burdens for clinicians.
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