Corrigendum to: Can menstrual health apps selected based on users' needs change health-related factors? A double-blind randomized controlled trial.
Author(s):
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocz083
Author(s):
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocz083
Video telehealth technology has the potential to enhance access for patients with clinical, social, and geographic barriers to care. We evaluated the implementation of a US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) initiative to distribute tablets to high-need Veterans with access barriers.
Author(s): Zulman, Donna M, Wong, Emily P, Slightam, Cindie, Gregory, Amy, Jacobs, Josephine C, Kimerling, Rachel, Blonigen, Daniel M, Peters, John, Heyworth, Leonie
DOI: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooz024
This case study describes the implementation of the Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) software at the United States Department of Veterans Affairs Veterans Health Administration (VA). VA REDCap enables secure and standardized data collection, fosters collaboration with external researchers through use of a widely used data management tool, facilitates multisite studies through use of data forms that can be shared across sites within and outside the VA, is well suited [...]
Author(s): Paris, Bonnie L, Hynes, Denise M
DOI: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooz017
The risk of medical errors increases upon transfer out of the intensive care unit (ICU). Discrepancies in the documented care plan between notes at the time of transfer may contribute to communication errors. We sought to determine the frequency of clinically meaningful discrepancies in the documented care plan for patients transferred from the pediatric ICU to the medical wards and identified risk factors.
Author(s): Orenstein, Evan W, Ferro, Daria F, Bonafide, Christopher P, Landrigan, Christopher P, Gillespie, Scott, Muthu, Naveen
DOI: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooz026
The purpose of this article is to describe the current nursing problem list subset of Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine Clinical Terms (NPLS) coverage of the American Nurses Association (ANA) recognized standardized nursing terminologies (SNTs) and to identify potential ways to expand and enhance the utility of this list.
Author(s): Kim, Junglyun, Yao, Yingwei, Macieira, Tamara Goncalves Rezende, Keenan, Gail
DOI: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooz023
Identifying new relations between medical entities, such as drugs, diseases, and side effects, is typically a resource-intensive task, involving experimentation and clinical trials. The increased availability of related data and curated knowledge enables a computational approach to this task, notably by training models to predict likely relations. Such models rely on meaningful representations of the medical entities being studied. We propose a generic features vector representation that leverages co-occurrences of [...]
Author(s): Spiro, Adam, Fernández García, Jonatan, Yanover, Chen
DOI: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooz022
Structured diagnosis (DX) are crucial for secondary use of electronic health record (EHR) data. However, they are often suboptimally recorded. Our previous work showed initial evidence of variable DX recording patterns in oncology charts even after biopsy records are available.
Author(s): Diaz-Garelli, Jose-Franck, Strowd, Roy, Ahmed, Tamjeed, Wells, Brian J, Merrill, Rebecca, Laurini, Javier, Pasche, Boris, Topaloglu, Umit
DOI: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooz020
To provide an open-source software package for determining temporal correlations between disease states using longitudinal electronic medical records (EMR).
Author(s): Lin, Huaiying, Rong, Ruichen, Gao, Xiang, Revanna, Kashi, Zhao, Michael, Bajic, Petar, Jin, David, Hu, Chengjun, Dong, Qunfeng
DOI: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooz031
To predict 72-h and 9-day emergency department (ED) return by using gradient boosting on an expansive set of clinical variables from the electronic health record.
Author(s): Hong, Woo Suk, Haimovich, Adrian Daniel, Taylor, Richard Andrew
DOI: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooz019
To examine performance of a sepsis surveillance system in a simulated environment where modifications to parameters and settings for identification of at-risk patients can be explored in-depth.
Author(s): Amland, Robert C, Burghart, Mark, Overhage, J Marc
DOI: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooz014