Informing patients: a guide for providing patient health information.
To understand and address patients' need for information surrounding ambulatory-care visits.
Author(s): Tang, P C, Newcomb, C
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050563
To understand and address patients' need for information surrounding ambulatory-care visits.
Author(s): Tang, P C, Newcomb, C
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050563
To investigate factors that determine the feasibility and effectiveness of a critiquing system for asthma/COPD that will be integrated with a general practitioner's (GP's) information system.
Author(s): Kuilboer, M M, van der Lei, J, de Jongste, J C, Overbeek, S E, Ponsioen, B, van Bemmel, J H
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050194
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
Author(s): McCray, A T, Miller, R A
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050129
The purpose of the study is to determine how frequently critical laboratory results (CLRs) occur and how rapidly they are acted upon. A CLR was defined as a result that met either the critical reporting criteria used by the laboratory at Brigham and Women's Hospital or other, more complex criteria.
Author(s): Kuperman, G J, Boyle, D, Jha, A, Rittenberg, E, Ma'Luf, N, Tanasijevic, M J, Teich, J M, Winkelman, J, Bates, D W
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050112
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
The National Library of Medicine's (NLM) Unified Medical Language System (UMLS) includes a Metathesaurus (Meta), which is a compilation of medical terms drawn from over 30 controlled vocabularies, and a Semantic Net, which contains the semantic types used to categorize Meta concepts and the semantic relations to connect them. Meta has been constructed through lexical matching techniques and human review. The purpose of this study was to audit the Meta [...]
Author(s): Cimino, J J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050041
The approach taken by the Unified Medical Language System (UMLS), in which disparate terminology systems are integrated, has allowed construction of an electronic thesaurus (the Metathesaurus) that avoids imposing any restrictions upon the content, structure, or semantics of the source terminologies. As such, the UMLS has served as a unifying paradigm by providing appropriate links among equivalent entities that are used in different contexts or for different purposes. It accordingly [...]
Author(s): Campbell, K E, Oliver, D E, Shortliffe, E H
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050012
Using electronic rather than paper-based record systems improves clinicians' information retrieval from patient narratives. However, few studies address how data should be organized for this purpose. Information retrieval from clinical narratives containing free text involves two steps: searching for a labeled segment and reading its content. The authors hypothesized that physicians can retrieve information better when clinical narratives are divided into many small, labeled segments ("high granularity").
Author(s): Tange, H J, Schouten, H C, Kester, A D, Hasman, A
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050571
Author(s): Corn, M
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050391