Nursing Informatics 1997 postconference on patient guidelines and clinical practice guidelines: the state of our knowledge and a vision.
Author(s): Grobe, S J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050315
Author(s): Grobe, S J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050315
Both consumers and health service providers need access to up-to-date information, including patient and practice guidelines, that allows them to make decisions in partnership about individual and public health in line with the primary health care model of health service delivery. Only then is it possible for patient preferences to be considered while the health of the general population is improved. The Commonwealth Government of Australia has allocated $250 million [...]
Author(s): Hovenga, E J, Hovel, J, Klotz, J, Robins, P
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050269
Practice guidelines are an integral part of evidence-based health care delivery. When the authors decided to install the clinical documentation component of an electronic health record in a nurse practitioner faculty practice, however, they found that they lacked the resources to integrate it immediately with other systems and components that would support the processing of clinical rules. They were thus challenged to devise an initial approach for decision support related [...]
Author(s): Henry, S B, Douglas, K, Galzagorry, G, Lahey, A, Holzemer, W L
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050237
To evaluate a "lexically assign, logically refine" (LALR) strategy for merging overlapping healthcare terminologies. This strategy combines description logic classification with lexical techniques that propose initial term definitions. The lexically suggested initial definitions are manually refined by domain experts to yield description logic definitions for each term in the overlapping terminologies of interest. Logic-based techniques are then used to merge defined terms.
Author(s): Dolin, R H, Huff, S M, Rocha, R A, Spackman, K A, Campbell, K E
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050203
This paper describes details of four scales of a questionnaire-- "Computers in Medical Care"--measuring attributes of computer use, self-reported computer knowledge, computer feature demand, and computer optimism of academic physicians. The reliability (i.e., precision, or degree to which the scale's result is reproducible) and validity (i.e., accuracy, or degree to which the scale actually measures what it is supposed to measure) of each scale were examined by analysis of the [...]
Author(s): Cork, R D, Detmer, W M, Friedman, C P
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050164
Guidelines regarding patient-provider electronic mail are presented. The intent is to provide guidance concerning computer-based communications between clinicians and patients within a contractual relationship in which the health-care provider has taken on an explicit measure of responsibility for the client's care. The guidelines address two interrelated aspects: effective interaction between the clinician and patient, and observance of medicolegal prudence. Recommendations for site-specific policy formulation are included.
Author(s): Kane, B, Sands, D Z
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050104
The authors evaluated the use of the Unified Medical Language System (UMLS) as a medical knowledge source for the representation of medical procedures in the MAOUSSC system.
Author(s): Bodenreider, O, Burgun, A, Botti, G, Fieschi, M, Le Beux, P, Kohler, F
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050076
Conceptualization of the physical objects and spaces that constitute the human body at the macroscopic level of organization, specified as a machine-parseable ontology that, in its human-readable form, is comprehensible to both expert and novice users of anatomical information.
Author(s): Rosse, C, Mejino, J L, Modayur, B R, Jakobovits, R, Hinshaw, K P, Brinkley, J F
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050017
Author(s): Stead, W W
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050583