AMIA Spring Congress examines health informatics training for Y2K and beyond. American Medical Informatics Association.
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Controlled medical terminologies (CMTs) have been recognized as important tools in a variety of medical informatics applications, ranging from patient-record systems to decision-support systems. Controlled medical terminologies are typically organized in semantic network structures consisting of tens to hundreds of thousands of concepts. This overwhelming size and complexity can be a serious barrier to their maintenance and widespread utilization. The authors propose the use of object-oriented databases to address the [...]
Author(s): Gu, H, Halper, M, Geller, J, Perl, Y
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060283
Author(s): Broering, N C
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060260
To investigate whether using a computer-based patient record (CPR) affects the completeness of documentation and appropriateness of documented clinical decisions.
Author(s): Tang, P C, LaRosa, M P, Gorden, S M
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060245
Many hospitals are investing in computer-based provider order-entry (POE) systems, and providers' evaluations have proved important for the success of the systems. The authors assessed how physicians and nurses viewed the effects of one modified commercial POE system on time spent patients, resource utilization, errors with orders, and overall quality of care.
Author(s): Weiner, M, Gress, T, Thiemann, D R, Jenckes, M, Reel, S L, Mandell, S F, Bass, E B
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060234
To assess the reliability of a reference standard for an information extraction task.
Author(s): Hripcsak, G, Kuperman, G J, Friedman, C, Heitjan, D F
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060143
To support clinically relevant indexing of biomedical images and image-related information based on the attributes of image acquisition procedures and the judgments (observations) expressed by observers in the process of image interpretation.
Author(s): Bidgood, W D, Bray, B, Brown, N, Mori, A R, Spackman, K A, Golichowski, A, Jones, R H, Korman, L, Dove, B, Hildebrand, L, Berg, M
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060061
Many adults with cancer are not enrolled in clinical trials because caregivers do not have the time to match the patient's clinical findings with varying eligibility criteria associated with multiple trials for which the patient might be eligible. The authors developed a point-of-use portable decision support tool (DS-TRIEL) to automate this matching process. The support tool consists of a hand-held computer with a programmable relational database. A two-level hierarchic decision [...]
Author(s): Breitfeld, P P, Weisburd, M, Overhage, J M, Sledge, G, Tierney, W M
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060466
In 1887, Polish physician Ludovic Zamenhof introduced Esperanto, a simple, easy-to-learn planned language. His goal was to erase communication barriers between ethnic groups by providing them with a politically neutral, culturally free standard language. His ideas received both praise and condemnation from the leaders of his time. Interest in Esperanto peaked in the 1970s but has since faded somewhat. Despite the logical concept and intellectual appeal of a standard language [...]
Author(s): Patterson, R, Huff, S M
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060444
This study examines how the information provided by a diagnostic decision support system for clinical cases of varying diagnostic difficulty affects physicians' diagnostic performance.
Author(s): Berner, E S, Maisiak, R S, Cobbs, C G, Taunton, O D
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1999.0060420