Presentation of the Morris F Collen Award to William Edward Hammond II, PhD.
Author(s): Stead, William W
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1523
Author(s): Stead, William W
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1523
This report describes XDesc (eXperiment Description), a pilot project that serves as a case study exploring the degree to which an informatics capability developed in a clinical application can be ported for use in the biosciences. In particular, XDesc uses the Entity-Attribute-Value database implementation (including a great deal of metadata-based functionality) developed in TrialDB, a clinical research database, for use in describing the samples used in microarray experiments stored in [...]
Author(s): Shifman, Mark A, Srivastava, Ranjana, Brandt, Cynthia A, Li, Tong-Ruei, White, Kevin, Miller, Perry L
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1458
The aim of this study was to determine whether an automated e-mail messaging system that sent individually timed educational messages (ITEMs) increased the effectiveness of an Internet smoking cessation intervention.
Author(s): Lenert, Leslie, Muñoz, Ricardo F, Perez, John E, Bansod, Aditya
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1464
Automated clinical decision support (CDS) has shown promise in improving safe medication use. The authors performed a trial of CDS, given both during computerized physician order entry (CPOE) and in response to new laboratory results, comparing the time courses of clinician behaviors related to digoxin use before and after implementation of the alerts.
Author(s): Galanter, William L, Polikaitis, Audrius, DiDomenico, Robert J
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1500
This study quantified the ease of use for patients and providers of a microcomputer-based, computer-assisted interview (CAI) system for the serial collection of the American College of Rheumatology Patient Assessment (ACRPA) questionnaire in routine outpatient clinical care in an urban rheumatology clinic.
Author(s): Williams, Carl A, Templin, Thomas, Mosley-Williams, Angelia D
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1527
The aim of this study was to construct automatically a knowledge base concerning the pharmacodynamic properties of antibiotics and a visualization tool.
Author(s): Duclos, Catherine, Cartolano, Gian Luigi, Ghez, Michael, Venot, Alain
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1425
There is an abundance of health-related information online, and millions of consumers search for such information. Spell checking is of crucial importance in returning pertinent results, so the authors propose a technique for increasing the effectiveness of spell-checking tools used for health-related information retrieval.
Author(s): Crowell, Jonathan, Zeng, Qing, Ngo, Long, Lacroix, Eve-Marie
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1474
Since 1999, the Nursing Terminology Summits have promoted the development, evaluation, and use of reference terminology for nursing and its integration into comprehensive health care data standards. The use of such standards to represent nursing knowledge, terminology, processes, and information in electronic health records will enhance continuity of care, decision support, and the exchange of comparable patient information. As part of this activity, working groups at the 2001, 2002, and [...]
Author(s): Goossen, William T F, Ozbolt, Judy G, Coenen, Amy, Park, Hyeoun-Ae, Mead, Charles, Ehnfors, Margareta, Marin, Heimar F
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1085
The effective coordination of health care relies on communication of confidential information about consumers between different health and community care services. However, consumers must be able to give or withhold "e-Consent" to those who wish to access their electronic health information. There are several possible forms for e-Consent. In the general consent model, a patient provides blanket consent for access to his or her information by an organization for all [...]
Author(s): Coiera, Enrico, Clarke, Roger
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1480
Clinicians generally record medical narrative data, such as current complaints, physical examination, and progress notes, as free text in paper-based medical records. The medical narrative involves heterogeneous and detailed data that include the description of (multiple) occurrences of medical findings or symptoms that may progress over time. Structured, electronic recording of narrative data would facilitate the use of these data for research. The authors' OpenSDE application supports clinicians with the [...]
Author(s): Los, Renske K, van Ginneken, Astrid M, de Wilde, Marcel, van der Lei, Johan
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1375