Biomedical and health informatics approaches remain essential for addressing the COVID-19 pandemic.
Author(s): Bakken, Suzanne
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocab007
Author(s): Bakken, Suzanne
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocab007
There is little debate about the importance of ethics in health care, and clearly defined rules, regulations, and oaths help ensure patients' trust in the care they receive. However, standards are not as well established for the data professions within health care, even though the responsibility to treat patients in an ethical way extends to the data collected about them. Increasingly, data scientists, analysts, and engineers are becoming fiduciarily responsible [...]
Author(s): Montague, Elizabeth, Day, T Eugene, Barry, Dwight, Brumm, Maria, McAdie, Aaron, Cooper, Andrew B, Wignall, Julia, Erdman, Steve, Núñez, Diahnna, Diekema, Douglas, Danks, David
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa307
To develop a risk score for the real-time prediction of readmissions for patients using patient specific information captured in electronic medical records (EMR) in Singapore to enable the prospective identification of high-risk patients for enrolment in timely interventions.
Author(s): Wu, Christine Xia, Suresh, Ernest, Phng, Francis Wei Loong, Tai, Kai Pik, Pakdeethai, Janthorn, D'Souza, Jared Louis Andre, Tan, Woan Shin, Phan, Phillip, Lew, Kelvin Sin Min, Tan, Gamaliel Yu-Heng, Chua, Gerald Seng Wee, Hwang, Chi Hong
DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1726422
After the outbreak of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, Chinese hospitals and health information technology (HIT) vendors collaborated to provide comprehensive information technology support for pandemic prevention and control. This study aims to describe the responses from the health information systems (HIS) to the COVID-19 pandemic and provide empirical evidence in the application of emerging health technologies in China.
Author(s): Ye, Jiancheng
DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1728770
The study aimed to understand potential barriers to the adoption of health information technology projects that are released as free and open source software (FOSS).
Author(s): Rasmussen, Luke V, Connolly, John J, Del Fiol, Guilherme, Freimuth, Robert R, Pet, Douglas B, Peterson, Josh F, Shirts, Brian H, Starren, Justin B, Williams, Marc S, Walton, Nephi, Taylor, Casey Overby
DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1729164
The pace of technological change dwarfs the pace of social and policy change. This mismatch allows for individual harm from lack of recognition of changes in societal context. The value of privacy has not kept pace with changes in technology over time; individuals seem to discount how loss of privacy can lead to directed personal harm.
Author(s): Ozeran, Larry, Solomonides, Anthony, Schreiber, Richard
DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1727197
Power mobility devices (PMDs) such as power wheelchairs and scooters are crucial for mobility, self-care, employment, and leisure activities. The documentation process for insurance coverage is complex and requires communication and document delivery among multiple stakeholders. The objective of this project was to develop an electronic submission process for medical documentation of PMDs submitted for prior authorization to a Medicare Administrative Contractor (MAC) and implement a standardized means of communication [...]
Author(s): Dicianno, Brad E, Gottschalk, Madalyn, Benton, Elizabeth, Caro, Mark, Pajer, David
DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1729166
Drug alerts are clinical decision support tools intended to prevent medication misadministration. In teaching hospitals, residents encounter the majority of the drug alerts while learning under variable workloads and responsibilities that may have an impact on drug-alert response rates.
Author(s): Gadhiya, Kinjal, Zamora, Edgar, Saiyed, Salim M, Friedlander, David, Kaelber, David C
DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1729167
The objective of the study was to highlight and analyze the outcomes of software configuration requests received from Sprint, a comprehensive, clinic-centered electronic health record (EHR) optimization program.
Author(s): Sieja, Amber, Kim, Eric, Holmstrom, Heather, Rotholz, Stephen, Lin, Chen Tan, Gonzalez, Christine, Arellano, Cortney, Hutchings, Sarah, Henderson, Denise, Markley, Katie
DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1728699
In the United States, all 50 state governments deployed publicly viewable dashboards regarding the novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) to track and respond to the pandemic. States dashboards, however, reflect idiosyncratic design practices based on their content, function, and visual design and platform. There has been little guidance for what state dashboards should look like or contain, leading to significant variation.
Author(s): Fareed, Naleef, Swoboda, Christine M, Chen, Sarah, Potter, Evelyn, Wu, Danny T Y, Sieck, Cynthia J
DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1723989