Pragmatics of implementing guidelines on the front lines.
Author(s): Waitman, Lemuel R, Miller, Randolph A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1621
Author(s): Waitman, Lemuel R, Miller, Randolph A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1621
Patient access to their electronic health care record (EHR) and Web-based communication between patients and providers can potentially improve the quality of health care, but little is known about patients' attitudes toward this combined electronic access. The objective of our study was to evaluate patients' values and perceptions regarding Web-based communication with their primary care providers in the context of access to their electronic health care record.
Author(s): Hassol, Andrea, Walker, James M, Kidder, David, Rokita, Kim, Young, David, Pierdon, Steven, Deitz, Deborah, Kuck, Sarah, Ortiz, Eduardo
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1593
The authors report on the development and evaluation of a novel patient-centered technology that promotes capture of critical information necessary to drive guideline-based care for pediatric asthma. The design of this application, the asthma kiosk, addresses five critical issues for patient-centered technology that promotes guideline-based care: (1) a front-end mechanism for patient-driven data capture, (2) neutrality regarding patients' medical expertise and technical backgrounds, (3) granular capture of medication data directly [...]
Author(s): Porter, Stephen C, Cai, Zhaohui, Gribbons, William, Goldmann, Donald A, Kohane, Isaac S
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1569
Author(s): Sands, Daniel Z
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1576
The aim of this study was to evaluate the experiences of patients and physicians in a clinical trial of an online electronic medical record (SPPARO, System Providing Patients Access to Records Online).
Author(s): Earnest, Mark A, Ross, Stephen E, Wittevrongel, Loretta, Moore, Laurie A, Lin, Chen-Tan
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1479
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
Monitoring vaccination activity requires regular access to information about patient vaccination status. This report describes our experience using multiple Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) data sources to determine availability and completeness of vaccination information for veterans with spinal cord injuries and disorders (SCI&D). Administrative and clinical databases were limited to coding vaccine administration, undercounted vaccinations, and were unable to account for whether the vaccine was offered and the reasons for [...]
Author(s): Weaver, Frances M, Hatzakis, Michael, Evans, Charlesnika T, Smith, Bridget, LaVela, Sherri L, Wallace, Carolyn, Legro, Marcia W, Goldstein, Barry
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1516
Information technology can support the implementation of clinical research findings in practice settings. Technology can address the quality gap in health care by providing automated decision support to clinicians that integrates guideline knowledge with electronic patient data to present real-time, patient-specific recommendations. However, technical success in implementing decision support systems may not translate directly into system use by clinicians. Successful technology integration into clinical work settings requires explicit attention to [...]
Author(s): Goldstein, Mary K, Coleman, Robert W, Tu, Samson W, Shankar, Ravi D, O'Connor, Martin J, Musen, Mark A, Martins, Susana B, Lavori, Philip W, Shlipak, Michael G, Oddone, Eugene, Advani, Aneel A, Gholami, Parisa, Hoffman, Brian B
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1534