Automated tuberculosis detection.
To measure the accuracy of automated tuberculosis case detection.
Author(s): Hripcsak, G, Knirsch, C A, Jain, N L, Pablos-Mendez, A
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040376
To measure the accuracy of automated tuberculosis case detection.
Author(s): Hripcsak, G, Knirsch, C A, Jain, N L, Pablos-Mendez, A
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040376
The authors provide a survey of how images are used in radiation therapy to improve the precision of radiation therapy plans, and delivery of radiation treatment. In contrast to diagnostic radiology, where the focus is on interpretation of the images to decide if disease is present, radiation therapy quantifies the extent of the region to be treated, and relates it to the proposed treatment using a quantitative modeling system called [...]
Author(s): Kalet, I J, Austin-Seymour, M M
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040327
To explore the informatic requirements in the home care of chronically ill patients.
Author(s): Tetzlaff, L
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040285
United States health care is engaged in an ambitious project to make its clinical and administrative records "100% electronic." Substantial benefits are expected in both clinical care delivery and medical research (especially for public health surveillance and outcomes/effectiveness studies). Substantial costs also potentially accrue, beyond the large outlays for an expanded computer and telecommunications infrastructure. Privacy and confidentiality are obviously at risk if such systems cannot be made secure. Limited [...]
Author(s): Cushman, R
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040259
We evaluate the ability of a microcomputer program (Automatch) to link patient records in our hospital's database (N = 253,836) with mortality files from California (N = 1,312,779) and the U.S. Social Security Administration (N = 13,341,581). We linked 96.5% of 3,448 in-hospital deaths, 99.3% for patients with social security numbers. None of 14,073 patients known to be alive (because they were subsequently admitted) was linked with California deaths, and [...]
Author(s): Newman, T B, Brown, A N
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040233
Information contained in medical images differs considerably from that residing in alphanumeric format. The difference can be attributed to four characteristics: (1) the semantics of medical knowledge extractable from images is imprecise; (2) image information contains form and spatial data, which are not expressible in conventional language; (3) a large part of image information is geometric; (4) diagnostic inferences derived from images rest on an incomplete, continuously evolving model of [...]
Author(s): Tagare, H D, Jaffe, C C, Duncan, J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040184
A national public and private "grand challenge" initiative should be undertaken to assure the American public that the telecommunications and computing revolutions improve health care, health education, and biomedical and health services research, and secure accountability for cost, quality, and access. The initiative should focus on meeting the needs of the patient and society at large. It needs to be a national vision, but it also ought to have regional [...]
Author(s): Detmer, D E
DOI:
This paper focuses on the basic principles of information technology (IT) organization within health sciences centers. The paper considers the placement of the leader of the IT effort within the health sciences administrative structure and the organization of the IT unit. A case study of the University of Missouri-Columbia Health Sciences Center demonstrates how a role-based organizational model for IT support can be effective for determining the boundary between centralized [...]
Author(s): Mitchell, J A
DOI:
Author(s): Greenes, R A
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040155
To identify impediments to the successful transfer and implementation of packaged information systems through large, divisionalized health services.
Author(s): Southon, F C, Sauer, C, Grant, C N
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040112