Access to data: comparing AccessMed with Query by Review.
To evaluate the performance of tools for authoring patient database queries.
Author(s): Hripcsak, G, Allen, B, Cimino, J J, Lee, R
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96413137
To evaluate the performance of tools for authoring patient database queries.
Author(s): Hripcsak, G, Allen, B, Cimino, J J, Lee, R
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96413137
Some observers feel that the federal government should play a more active leadership role in educating the medical community and in coordinating and encouraging a more rapid and effective implementation of clinically relevant applications of wide-area networking. Other people argue that the private sector is recognizing the importance of these issues and will, when the market demands it, adopt and enhance the telecommunications systems that are needed to produce effective [...]
Author(s): Shortliffe, E H, Bleich, H L, Caine, C G, Masys, D R, Simborg, D W
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96413132
To evaluate the applicability of metrics collected during routine use to monitor the performance of a deployed expert system.
Author(s): Kahn, M G, Steib, S A, Dunagan, W C, Fraser, V J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96310635
Author(s): Friedman, C P, Dev, P
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96236286
This case report describes development and testing of a method to extract clinical information stored in the Veterans Affairs (VA) Decentralized Hospital Computer System (DHCP) for the purpose of analyzing data about groups of patients. The authors used a microcomputer-based, structured query language (SQL)-compatible, relational database system to replicate a subset of the Nashville VA Hospital's DHCP patient database. This replicated database contained the complete current Nashville DHCP prescription, provider [...]
Author(s): Graber, S E, Seneker, J A, Stahl, A A, Franklin, K O, Neel, T E, Miller, R A
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96236283
The National Library of Medicine's Visible Human Male data set consists of digital magnetic resonance (MR), computed tomography (CT), and anatomic images derived from a single male cadaver. The data set is 15 gigabytes in size and is available from the National Library of Medicine under a no-cost license agreement. The history of the Visible Human Male cadaver and the methods and technology to produce the data set are described.
Author(s): Spitzer, V, Ackerman, M J, Scherzinger, A L, Whitlock, D
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96236280
Author(s): Braithwaite, W R
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96342653
To examine the issues involved in mapping an existing structured controlled vocabulary, the Medical Entities Dictionary (MED) developed at Columbia University, to an institutional vocabulary, the laboratory and pharmacy vocabularies of the Yale New Haven Medical Center.
Author(s): Kannry, J L, Wright, L, Shifman, M, Silverstein, S, Miller, P L
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96342650
The objective of the Willow Project is to develop a uniform search interface that allows a diverse community of users to retrieve information from heterogeneous network-based information resources. Willow separates the user interface from the database management or information retrieval system. It provides a graphic user interface to a variety of information resources residing on diverse hosts, and using different search engines and idiomatic query languages through networked-based client-server and [...]
Author(s): Ketchell, D S, Freedman, M M, Jordan, W E, Lightfoot, E M, Heyano, S, Libbey, P A
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96342647
The Internet is rapidly evolving from a resource used primarily by the research community to a true global information network offering a wide range of databases and services. This evolution presents many opportunities for improved access to biomedical information, but Internet-based resources have often been difficult for the non-expert to develop and use. The World Wide Web (WWW) supports an inexpensive, easy-to-use, cross-platform, graphic interface to the Internet that may [...]
Author(s): Lowe, H J, Lomax, E C, Polonkey, S E
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96342645