Telemedicine, privacy, and information security in the age of COVID-19.
Author(s): Jalali, Mohammad S, Landman, Adam, Gordon, William J
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa310
Author(s): Jalali, Mohammad S, Landman, Adam, Gordon, William J
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa310
Author(s): Rousseau, Justin F, Tierney, William M
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa285
The increasing complexity of data streams and computational processes in modern clinical health information systems makes reproducibility challenging. Clinical natural language processing (NLP) pipelines are routinely leveraged for the secondary use of data. Workflow management systems (WMS) have been widely used in bioinformatics to handle the reproducibility bottleneck.
Author(s): Digan, William, Névéol, Aurélie, Neuraz, Antoine, Wack, Maxime, Baudoin, David, Burgun, Anita, Rance, Bastien
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa261
The study sought to evaluate if peer input on outpatient cases impacted diagnostic confidence.
Author(s): Khoong, Elaine C, Fontil, Valy, Rivadeneira, Natalie A, Hoskote, Mekhala, Nundy, Shantanu, Lyles, Courtney R, Sarkar, Urmimala
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa278
Digital medical records have enabled us to employ clinical data in many new and innovative ways. However, these advances have brought with them a complex set of demands for healthcare institutions regarding data sharing with topics such as data ownership, the loss of privacy, and the protection of the intellectual property. The lack of clear guidance from government entities often creates conflicting messages about data policy, leaving institutions to develop [...]
Author(s): Cole, Curtis L, Sengupta, Soumitra, Rossetti Née Collins, Sarah, Vawdrey, David K, Halaas, Michael, Maddox, Thomas M, Gordon, Geoff, Dave, Trushna, Payne, Philip R O, Williams, Andrew E, Estrin, Deborah
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa260
Tuberculosis is the leading cause of death from a single infectious agent. The emergence of antimicrobial resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains makes the problem more severe. Pyrazinamide (PZA) is an important component for short-course treatment regimens and first- and second-line treatment regimens. This research aims for fast diagnosis of M. tuberculosis resistance to PZA and identification of genetic features causing resistance.
Author(s): Zhang, Andrew, Teng, Ling, Alterovitz, Gil
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa233
Information gaps that accompany hurricanes and floods limit researchers' ability to determine the impact of disasters on population health. Defining key use cases for sharing complex disaster data with research communities and facilitators, and barriers to doing so are key to promoting population health research for disaster recovery.
Author(s): Phuong, Jimmy, Bandaragoda, Christina J, Haldar, Shefali, Stephens, Kari A, Ordonez, Patricia, Mooney, Sean D, Hartzler, Andrea L
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa195
To determine interest in and barriers to video visits in safety-net patients with diverse age, racial/ethnic, or linguistic background.
Author(s): Khoong, Elaine C, Butler, Blythe A, Mesina, Omar, Su, George, DeFries, Triveni B, Nijagal, Malini, Lyles, Courtney R
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa234
Human trafficking is a global problem taking many forms, including sex and labor exploitation. Trafficking victims can be any age, although most trafficking begins when victims are adolescents. Many trafficking victims have contact with health-care providers across various health-care contexts, both for emergency and routine care.
Author(s): Unertl, Kim M, Walsh, Colin G, Clayton, Ellen Wright
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa142
The lack of representative coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) data is a bottleneck for reliable and generalizable machine learning. Data sharing is insufficient without data quality, in which source variability plays an important role. We showcase and discuss potential biases from data source variability for COVID-19 machine learning.
Author(s): Sáez, Carlos, Romero, Nekane, Conejero, J Alberto, García-Gómez, Juan M
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa258