Focusing energy on biomedical engineering, imaging, and informatics research.
Author(s): Stead, W W
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060334
Author(s): Stead, W W
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060334
While preference elicitation techniques have been effective in helping patients make decisions consistent with their preferences, little is known about whether information about patient preferences affects clinicians in clinical decision making and improves patient outcomes. The purpose of this study was to evaluate a decision support system for eliciting elderly patients' preferences for self-care capability and providing this information to nurses in clinical practice-specifically, its effect on nurses' care priorities [...]
Author(s): Ruland, C M
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060304
Biomedical informatics, imaging, and engineering are major forces driving the knowledge revolutions that are shaping the agendas for biomedical research and clinical medicine in the 21st century. These disciplines produce the tools and techniques to advance biomedical research, and continually feed new technologies and procedures into clinical medicine. To sustain this force, an increased investment is needed in the physics, biomedical science, engineering, mathematics, information science, and computer science undergirding [...]
Author(s): Hendee, W R
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060267
To determine the relevant weighted goals and criteria for use in the selection of an automated patient care information system (PCIS) using a modified Delphi technique to achieve consensus.
Author(s): Chocholik, J K, Bouchard, S E, Tan, J K, Ostrow, D N
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060219
Clinical laboratories and clinicians transmit certain laboratory test results to public health agencies as required by state or local law. Most of these surveillance data are currently received by conventional mail or facsimile transmission. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists, and Association of Public Health Laboratories are preparing to implement surveillance systems that will use existing laboratory information systems to transmit electronic [...]
Author(s): White, M D, Kolar, L M, Steindel, S J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060185
The authors surveyed existing standard codes for units of measures, such as ISO 2955, ANSI X3.50, and Health Level 7's ISO+. Because these standards specify only the character representation of units, the authors developed a semantic model for units based on dimensional analysis. Through this model, conversion between units and calculations with dimensioned quantities become as simple as calculating with numbers. All atomic symbols for prefixes and units are defined [...]
Author(s): Schadow, G, McDonald, C J, Suico, J G, Föhring, U, Tolxdorff, T
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060151
As health care moves from paper to electronic data collection, providing easier access and dissemination of health information, the development of guiding privacy, confidentiality, and security principles is necessary to help balance the protection of patients' privacy interests against appropriate information access. A comparative review and analysis was done, based on a compilation of privacy, confidentiality, and security principles from many sources. Principles derived from ten identified sources were compared [...]
Author(s): Buckovich, S A, Rippen, H E, Rozen, M J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060122
Entity-attribute-value (EAV) representation is a means of organizing highly heterogeneous data using a relatively simple physical database schema. EAV representation is widely used in the medical domain, most notably in the storage of data related to clinical patient records. Its potential strengths suggest its use in other biomedical areas, in particular research databases whose schemas are complex as well as constantly changing to reflect evolving knowledge in rapidly advancing scientific [...]
Author(s): Nadkarni, P M, Marenco, L, Chen, R, Skoufos, E, Shepherd, G, Miller, P
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060478
In 1887, Polish physician Ludovic Zamenhof introduced Esperanto, a simple, easy-to-learn planned language. His goal was to erase communication barriers between ethnic groups by providing them with a politically neutral, culturally free standard language. His ideas received both praise and condemnation from the leaders of his time. Interest in Esperanto peaked in the 1970s but has since faded somewhat. Despite the logical concept and intellectual appeal of a standard language [...]
Author(s): Patterson, R, Huff, S M
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060444
Describe and evaluate an Internet-based approach to patient decision support using mathematical models that predict the probability of successful treatment on the basis of meta-analytic summaries of the mean and standard deviation of symptom response.
Author(s): Lenert, L A, Cher, D J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060412