The JAMIA Student Editorial Board: peer review education in biomedical informatics.
Author(s): Johnson, Kevin B, Miller, Randolph A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1473
Author(s): Johnson, Kevin B, Miller, Randolph A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1473
To determine clinicians' (doctors', nurses', and allied health professionals') "actual" and "reported" use of a point-of-care online information retrieval system; and to make an assessment of the extent to which use is related to direct patient care by testing two hypotheses: hypothesis 1: clinicians use online evidence primarily to support clinical decisions relating to direct patient care; and hypothesis 2: clinicians use online evidence predominantly for research and continuing education.
Author(s): Westbrook, Johanna I, Gosling, A Sophie, Coiera, Enrico
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1385
To determine the availability of inpatient computerized physician order entry in U.S. hospitals and the degree to which physicians are using it.
Author(s): Ash, Joan S, Gorman, Paul N, Seshadri, Veena, Hersh, William R
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1427
The aim of this study was to rigorously evaluate perceived differences in satisfaction with an electronic health record (EHR) between residents of two medical specialties who share the same health record, practice location, administration, and information technology support.
Author(s): O'Connell, Ryan T, Cho, Christine, Shah, Nidhi, Brown, Karen, Shiffman, Richard N
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1409
Electronic prescribing (e-prescribing) may substantially improve health care quality and efficiency, but the available systems are complex and their heterogeneity makes comparing and evaluating them a challenge. The authors aimed to develop a conceptual framework for anticipating the effects of alternative designs for outpatient e-prescribing systems.
Author(s): Bell, Douglas S, Cretin, Shan, Marken, Richard S, Landman, Adam B
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1374
To survey a cross section of patients presenting to three urban primary care clinics to understand online health information search behaviors.
Author(s): Dickerson, Suzanne, Reinhart, Amber M, Feeley, Thomas Hugh, Bidani, Rakesh, Rich, Ellen, Garg, Vinod K, Hershey, Charles O
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1460
The purpose of this proof-of-concept study was to assess the feasibility of using a generic health measure to create coded functional status indicators and compare the characterization of a stroke population using coded functional indicators and using health-related quality-of-life summary measures alone.
Author(s): Mayo, Nancy E, Poissant, Lise, Ahmed, Sara, Finch, Lois, Higgins, Johanne, Salbach, Nancy M, Soicher, Judith, Jaglal, Susan
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1462
Author(s): Sands, Daniel Z
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1576
An understanding of the strengths and limitations of automated data is valuable when using administrative or clinical databases to monitor and improve the quality of health care. This study discusses the feasibility and validity of using data electronically extracted from the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) computer database (VistA) to monitor guideline performance for inpatient and outpatient treatment of schizophrenia. The authors also discuss preliminary results and their experience in applying [...]
Author(s): Owen, Richard R, Thrush, Carol R, Cannon, Dale, Sloan, Kevin L, Curran, Geoff, Hudson, Teresa, Austen, Mark, Ritchie, Mona
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1498
In highly functional metadata-driven software, the interrelationships within the metadata become complex, and maintenance becomes challenging. We describe an approach to metadata management that uses a knowledge-base subschema to store centralized information about metadata dependencies and use cases involving specific types of metadata modification. Our system borrows ideas from production-rule systems in that some of this information is a high-level specification that is interpreted and executed dynamically by a middleware [...]
Author(s): Brandt, Cynthia A, Gadagkar, Rohit, Rodriguez, Cesar, Nadkarni, Prakash M
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1511