National Health Information Privacy Bill generates heat at SCAMC.
Author(s): Braithwaite, W R
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96342653
Author(s): Braithwaite, W R
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96342653
To develop a system for clinical performance improvement through rule-based analysis of medical practice patterns and individualized distribution of published scientific evidence.
Author(s): Balas, E A, Li, Z R, Spencer, D C, Jaffrey, F, Brent, E, Mitchell, J A
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96342649
The objective of the Willow Project is to develop a uniform search interface that allows a diverse community of users to retrieve information from heterogeneous network-based information resources. Willow separates the user interface from the database management or information retrieval system. It provides a graphic user interface to a variety of information resources residing on diverse hosts, and using different search engines and idiomatic query languages through networked-based client-server and [...]
Author(s): Ketchell, D S, Freedman, M M, Jordan, W E, Lightfoot, E M, Heyano, S, Libbey, P A
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96342647
The Internet is rapidly evolving from a resource used primarily by the research community to a true global information network offering a wide range of databases and services. This evolution presents many opportunities for improved access to biomedical information, but Internet-based resources have often been difficult for the non-expert to develop and use. The World Wide Web (WWW) supports an inexpensive, easy-to-use, cross-platform, graphic interface to the Internet that may [...]
Author(s): Lowe, H J, Lomax, E C, Polonkey, S E
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96342645
To assess the effects of incomplete data upon the output of a computerized diagnostic decision support system (DSS), to assess the effects of using the system upon the diagnostic opinions of users, and to explore if these effects vary as a function of clinical experience.
Author(s): Elstein, A S, Friedman, C P, Wolf, F M, Murphy, G, Miller, J, Fine, P, Heckerling, P, Miller, T, Sisson, J, Barlas, S, Biolsi, K, Ng, M, Mei, X, Franz, T, Capitano, A
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.97084515
Provision of automated support for planning protocol-directed therapy requires a computer program to take as input clinical data stored in an electronic patient-record system and to generate as output recommendations for therapeutic interventions and laboratory testing that are defined by applicable protocols. This paper presents a synthesis of research carried out at Stanford University to model the therapy-planning task and to demonstrate a component-based architecture for building protocol-based decision-support systems [...]
Author(s): Musen, M A, Tu, S W, Das, A K, Shahar, Y
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.97084511
A research prototype Physician Workstation (PWS) incorporating a graphical user interface and a drug ordering module was compared with the existing hospital information system in an academic Veterans Administration General Medical Clinic. Physicians in the intervention group received recommendations for drug substitutions to reduce costs and were alerted to potential drug interactions. The objective was to evaluate the effect of the PWS on user satisfaction, on health-related outcomes, and on [...]
Author(s): Rotman, B L, Sullivan, A N, McDonald, T W, Brown, B W, DeSmedt, P, Goodnature, D, Higgins, M C, Suermondt, H J, Young, C, Owens, D K
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.97035025
Java, a new object-oriented computing language related to C++, is receiving considerable attention due to its use in creating network-sharable, platform-independent software modules (known as "applets") that can be used with the World Wide Web. The Web has rapidly become the most commonly used information-retrieval tool associated with the global computer network known as the Internet, and Java has the potential to further accelerate the Web's application to medical problems [...]
Author(s): Rodgers, R P
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.97035021
Author(s): Stead, W W
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96310638
To examine the relationships among different performance scores for each of four diagnostic decision support systems (DDSSs).
Author(s): Berner, E S, Jackson, J R, Algina, J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96310634