Rejoinder to "Ethical issues in the use of SMS messaging in HIV care and treatment in low-and-middle-income countries".
Author(s): Inguane, Celso A, Nalá, Rassul
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy090
Author(s): Inguane, Celso A, Nalá, Rassul
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy090
Our objective was to review the characteristics, current applications, and evaluation measures of conversational agents with unconstrained natural language input capabilities used for health-related purposes.
Author(s): Laranjo, Liliana, Dunn, Adam G, Tong, Huong Ly, Kocaballi, Ahmet Baki, Chen, Jessica, Bashir, Rabia, Surian, Didi, Gallego, Blanca, Magrabi, Farah, Lau, Annie Y S, Coiera, Enrico
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy072
Hospitals that routinely share patients are those that most critically need to engage in electronic health information exchange (HIE) with each other to ensure clinical information is available to inform treatment decisions. We surveyed pairs of hospitals in a nationwide sample to describe whether and how hospitals within each hospital referral region (HRR) that have the highest shared patient (HSP) volume engaged in HIE with each other.
Author(s): Everson, Jordan, Adler-Milstein, Julia
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy089
The use of electronic health records (EHRs) for research has the potential to improve the diagnosis and treatment of disease, yet contact with patients based on results of EHR phenotyping has received little attention. Researchers will almost certainly discover discrepancies in EHRs that call for resolution and, in some cases, raise the ethical dilemma of whether to contact patients about a potentially undiagnosed or untreated health concern. The objective of [...]
Author(s): Brelsford, Kathleen M, Spratt, Susan E, Beskow, Laura M
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy087
Horizontal consolidation in the hospital industry has gained momentum in the United States despite concerns over rising costs and lower quality. Hospital systems frequently point to potential gains in interoperability and electronic exchange of patient information as consolidation benefits. We sought to assess whether hospitals in different health system structures varied in their interoperable data sharing.
Author(s): Holmgren, A Jay, Ford, Eric W
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy084
Prior studies suggest inviting patients to read their visit notes (OpenNotes) has important benefits for patient engagement. We utilized survey data to investigate our hypothesis that patients who read more notes would report greater shared decision making (SDM).
Author(s): Fossa, Alan J, Bell, Sigall K, DesRoches, Catherine
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy083
To test the hypothesis that use of a clinical decision support (CDS) system in a primary care setting can reduce cardiovascular (CV) risk in patients.
Author(s): Sperl-Hillen, JoAnn M, Crain, A Lauren, Margolis, Karen L, Ekstrom, Heidi L, Appana, Deepika, Amundson, Gerald, Sharma, Rashmi, Desai, Jay R, O'Connor, Patrick J
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy085
To characterize the variability in usability and safety of EHRs from two vendors across four healthcare systems (2 Epic and 2 Cerner). Twelve to 15 emergency medicine physicians participated from each site and completed six clinical scenarios. Keystroke, mouse click, and video data were collected. From the six scenarios, two diagnostic imaging, laboratory, and medication tasks were analyzed. There was wide variability in task completion time, clicks, and error rates [...]
Author(s): Ratwani, Raj M, Savage, Erica, Will, Amy, Arnold, Ryan, Khairat, Saif, Miller, Kristen, Fairbanks, Rollin J, Hodgkins, Michael, Hettinger, A Zachary
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy088
To study the association between Electronic Health Record (EHR)/Computerized Physician Order Entry (CPOE) provider price display, and domains of healthcare quality (efficiency, effective care, patient centered care, patient safety, equitable care, and timeliness of care).
Author(s): Mummadi, Srinivas R, Mishra, Raghavendra
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy076
To review and analyze the literature to determine whether wearable technologies can predict health outcomes.
Author(s): Burnham, Jason P, Lu, Chenyang, Yaeger, Lauren H, Bailey, Thomas C, Kollef, Marin H
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy082