Implementation challenges for clinical and research information systems: recommendations from the 2007 winter symposium of the American College Of Medical Informatics.
Author(s): Berner, Eta S
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2581
Author(s): Berner, Eta S
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2581
Effective health communication is often hindered by a "vocabulary gap" between language familiar to consumers and jargon used in medical practice and research. To present health information to consumers in a comprehensible fashion, we need to develop a mechanism to quantify health terms as being more likely or less likely to be understood by typical members of the lay public. Prior research has used approaches including syllable count, easy word [...]
Author(s): Zeng-Treitler, Qing, Goryachev, Sergey, Tse, Tony, Keselman, Alla, Boxwala, Aziz
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2592
To develop a security infrastructure to support controlled and secure access to data and analytical resources in a biomedical research Grid environment, while facilitating resource sharing among collaborators.
Author(s): Langella, Stephen, Hastings, Shannon, Oster, Scott, Pan, Tony, Sharma, Ashish, Permar, Justin, Ervin, David, Cambazoglu, B Barla, Kurc, Tahsin, Saltz, Joel
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2662
To determine the effectiveness of providing synthesized research evidence to inform patient care practices via an evidence based informatics program, the Clinical Informatics Consult Service (CICS).
Author(s): Mulvaney, Shelagh A, Bickman, Leonard, Giuse, Nunzia B, Lambert, E Warren, Sathe, Nila A, Jerome, Rebecca N
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2461
To investigate the agreement among clinical experts in their judgments of monitoring data with respect to artifacts, and to examine the effect of reference standards that consist of individual and joint expert judgments on the performance of artifact filters.
Author(s): Verduijn, Marion, Peek, Niels, de Keizer, Nicolette F, van Lieshout, Erik-Jan, de Pont, Anne-Cornelie J M, Schultz, Marcus J, de Jonge, Evert, de Mol, Bas A J M
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2493
Unstructured electronic information sources, such as news reports, are proving to be valuable inputs for public health surveillance. However, staying abreast of current disease outbreaks requires scouring a continually growing number of disparate news sources and alert services, resulting in information overload. Our objective is to address this challenge through the HealthMap.org Web application, an automated system for querying, filtering, integrating and visualizing unstructured reports on disease outbreaks.
Author(s): Freifeld, Clark C, Mandl, Kenneth D, Reis, Ben Y, Brownstein, John S
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2544
Author(s): Simborg, Donald W
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2573
Monitoring vital signs and locations of certain classes of ambulatory patients can be useful in overcrowded emergency departments and at disaster scenes, both on-site and during transportation. To be useful, such monitoring needs to be portable and low cost, and have minimal adverse impact on emergency personnel, e.g., by not raising an excessive number of alarms. The SMART (Scalable Medical Alert Response Technology) system integrates wireless patient monitoring (ECG, SpO(2)) [...]
Author(s): Curtis, Dorothy W, Pino, Esteban J, Bailey, Jacob M, Shih, Eugene I, Waterman, Jason, Vinterbo, Staal A, Stair, Thomas O, Guttag, John V, Greenes, Robert A, Ohno-Machado, Lucila
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2016
This study sought to explore the relationship of workarounds related to the implementation of an electronic medication administration record and medication safety practices in five Midwestern nursing homes.
Author(s): Vogelsmeier, Amy A, Halbesleben, Jonathon R B, Scott-Cawiezell, Jill R
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2378
We describe the architecture of LifeCode (A-Life Medical, Inc.), a natural language processing system for free-text clinical information extraction, our methodology in applying LifeCode to the i2b2 smoking challenge, and statistical measures for performance evaluation. Due to the limited test size and the coefficient of variation in the test standard, it is difficult to draw conclusions regarding the relative efficacy of approaches that were applied to this challenge.
Author(s): Heinze, Daniel T, Morsch, Mark L, Potter, Brian C, Sheffer, Ronald E
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2438