Assessment of eHealth behaviors in national surveys: a systematic review of instruments.
To conduct a systematic review of instruments used in national surveys of eHealth behaviors.
Author(s): Hong, Y Alicia, Cho, Jinmyoung
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy128
To conduct a systematic review of instruments used in national surveys of eHealth behaviors.
Author(s): Hong, Y Alicia, Cho, Jinmyoung
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy128
As smartphones and sensors become more prominently used in mobile health, the methods used to analyze the resulting data must also be carefully considered. The advantages of smartphone-based studies, including large quantities of temporally dense longitudinally captured data, must be matched with the appropriate statistical methods in order draw valid conclusions. In this paper, we review and provide recommendations in 3 critical domains of analysis for these types of temporally [...]
Author(s): Barnett, Ian, Torous, John, Staples, Patrick, Keshavan, Matcheri, Onnela, Jukka-Pekka
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy121
Parents routinely access young children's medical records, but medical societies strongly recommend confidential care during adolescence, and most medical centers restrict parental records access during the teen years. We sought to assess public opinion about adolescent medical privacy.
Author(s): Ancker, Jessica S, Sharko, Marianne, Hong, Matthew, Mitchell, Hannah, Wilcox, Lauren
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy120
Develop an approach, One-class-at-a-time, for triaging psychiatric patients using machine learning on textual patient records. Our approach aims to automate the triaging process and reduce expert effort while providing high classification reliability.
Author(s): Singh, Vivek Kumar, Shrivastava, Utkarsh, Bouayad, Lina, Padmanabhan, Balaji, Ialynytchev, Anna, Schultz, Susan K
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy109
Globally, 36% of deaths among children can be attributed to environmental factors. However, no comprehensive list of environmental exposures exists. We seek to address this gap by developing a literature-mining algorithm to catalog prenatal environmental exposures.
Author(s): Boland, Mary Regina, Kashyap, Aditya, Xiong, Jiadi, Holmes, John, Lorch, Scott
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy119
Investigating the molecular mechanisms of symptoms is a vital task in precision medicine to refine disease taxonomy and improve the personalized management of chronic diseases. Although there are abundant experimental studies and computational efforts to obtain the candidate genes of diseases, the identification of symptom genes is rarely addressed. We curated a high-quality benchmark dataset of symptom-gene associations and proposed a heterogeneous network embedding for identifying symptom genes.
Author(s): Yang, Kuo, Wang, Ning, Liu, Guangming, Wang, Ruyu, Yu, Jian, Zhang, Runshun, Chen, Jianxin, Zhou, Xuezhong
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy117
Online platforms have created a variety of opportunities for breast patients to discuss their hormonal therapy, a long-term adjuvant treatment to reduce the chance of breast cancer occurrence and mortality. The goal of this investigation is to ascertain the extent to which the messages breast cancer patients communicated through an online portal can indicate their potential for discontinuing hormonal therapy.
Author(s): Yin, Zhijun, Harrell, Morgan, Warner, Jeremy L, Chen, Qingxia, Fabbri, Daniel, Malin, Bradley A
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy118
Data derived from primary care electronic medical records (EMRs) are being used for research and surveillance. Case definitions are required to identify patients with specific conditions in EMR data with a degree of accuracy. The purpose of this study is to identify and provide a summary of case definitions that have been validated in primary care EMR data.
Author(s): McBrien, Kerry A, Souri, Sepideh, Symonds, Nicola E, Rouhi, Azin, Lethebe, Brendan C, Williamson, Tyler S, Garies, Stephanie, Birtwhistle, Richard, Quan, Hude, Fabreau, Gabriel E, Ronksley, Paul E
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy094
Electronic health record (EHR) algorithms for defining patient cohorts are commonly shared as free-text descriptions that require human intervention both to interpret and implement. We developed the Phenotype Execution and Modeling Architecture (PhEMA, http://projectphema.org) to author and execute standardized computable phenotype algorithms. With PhEMA, we converted an algorithm for benign prostatic hyperplasia, developed for the electronic Medical Records and Genomics network (eMERGE), into a standards-based computable format. Eight sites (7 [...]
Author(s): Pacheco, Jennifer A, Rasmussen, Luke V, Kiefer, Richard C, Campion, Thomas R, Speltz, Peter, Carroll, Robert J, Stallings, Sarah C, Mo, Huan, Ahuja, Monika, Jiang, Guoqian, LaRose, Eric R, Peissig, Peggy L, Shang, Ning, Benoit, Barbara, Gainer, Vivian S, Borthwick, Kenneth, Jackson, Kathryn L, Sharma, Ambrish, Wu, Andy Yizhou, Kho, Abel N, Roden, Dan M, Pathak, Jyotishman, Denny, Joshua C, Thompson, William K
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy101
Public health surveillance programs worldwide implement a variety of case-finding strategies, and many rely at least in part on International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-based diagnostic codes in administrative and clinical databases. Over time, state- and national-level hospital discharge databases have been expanding the number of reported diagnosis code fields. This study aimed to evaluate the impact of these expansions on frequencies and rates of major birth defects, and the classification [...]
Author(s): Salemi, Jason L, Rutkowski, Rachel E, Tanner, Jean Paul, Matas, Jennifer, Kirby, Russell S
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy096