HIPAA Possumus.
Author(s): Madsen, Elizabeth, Masys, Daniel R, Miller, Randolph A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1355
Author(s): Madsen, Elizabeth, Masys, Daniel R, Miller, Randolph A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1355
Author(s): Shojania, Kaveh G
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1197
The authors implemented an electronic medical record system in a rural Kenyan health center. Visit data are recorded on a paper encounter form, eliminating duplicate documentation in multiple clinic logbooks. Data are entered into an MS-Access database supported by redundant power systems. The system was initiated in February 2001, and 10,000 visit records were entered for 6,190 patients in six months. The authors present a summary of the clinics visited [...]
Author(s): Rotich, Joseph K, Hannan, Terry J, Smith, Faye E, Bii, John, Odero, Wilson W, Vu, Nguyen, Mamlin, Burke W, Mamlin, Joseph J, Einterz, Robert M, Tierney, William M
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1301
An essential part of health informatics is telemedicine, the use of advanced telecommunications technologies to bridge distance and support health care delivery and education. This report discusses the integration of telemedicine into a medical informatics curriculum and, specifically, a framework for a telemedicine course. Within this framework, the objectives and exit competencies are presented and course sections are described: definitions, introduction to technical aspects of telemedicine, evolution of telemedicine and [...]
Author(s): Demiris, George
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1280
The authors describe a research group that supports the needs of investigators seeking data from an electronic medical record system. Since its creation in 1972, the Regenstrief Medical Records System has captured and stored more than 350 million discrete coded observations on two million patients. This repository has become a central data source for prospective and retrospective research. It is accessed by six data analysts--working closely with the institutional review [...]
Author(s): Murray, Michael D, Smith, Faye E, Fox, Joanne, Teal, Evgenia Y, Kesterson, Joseph G, Stiffler, Troy A, Ambuehl, Roberta J, Wang, Jane, Dibble, Maria, Benge, Dennis O, Betley, Leonard J, Tierney, William M, McDonald, Clement J
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1252
Physician order entry is a powerful function of a computerized hospital information system. Although designed to be clinician-driven, the imaging section of the order entry system may not be designed optimally to engage the clinician with imaging procedures logically organized for the clinician's typical work patterns. There also may be resistance among overburdened clinicians in having to take the time to learn a new computer system and to assume "clerk's [...]
Author(s): Schuster, David M, Hall, Suzanne E, Couse, Carole B, Swayngim, Debra S, Kohatsu, Keith Y
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1208
Data representations on today's medical monitors need to be improved to advance clinical awareness and prevent data vigilance errors. Simply building graphical displays does not ensure an improvement in clinical performance because displays have to be consistent with the user's clinical processes and mental models. In this report, the development of an original pulmonary graphical display for anesthesia is used as an example to show an iterative design process with [...]
Author(s): Wachter, S Blake, Agutter, Jim, Syroid, Noah, Drews, Frank, Weinger, Matthew B, Westenskow, Dwayne
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1207
The purposes of the study were (1) to evaluate the usefulness of the International Standards Organization (ISO) Reference Terminology Model for Nursing Diagnoses as a terminology model for defining nursing diagnostic concepts in the Medical Entities Dictionary (MED) and (2) to create the additional hierarchical structures required for integration of nursing diagnostic concepts into the MED.
Author(s): Hwang, Jee-In, Cimino, James J, Bakken, Suzanne
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1203
Detecting adverse events is pivotal for measuring and improving medical safety, yet current techniques discourage routine screening. The authors hypothesized that discharge summaries would include information on adverse events, and they developed and evaluated an electronic method for screening medical discharge summaries for adverse events.
Author(s): Murff, Harvey J, Forster, Alan J, Peterson, Josh F, Fiskio, Julie M, Heiman, Heather L, Bates, David W
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1201
Primary care informatics is an emerging academic discipline that remains undefined. The unique nature of primary care necessitates the development of its own informatics discipline. A definition of primary care informatics is proposed, which encompasses the distinctive nature of primary care. The core concepts and theory that should underpin it are described. Primary care informatics is defined as a science and as a subset of health informatics. The proposed definition [...]
Author(s): de Lusignan, Simon
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1187