The JAMIA Student Editorial Board: peer review education in biomedical informatics.
Author(s): Johnson, Kevin B, Miller, Randolph A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1473
Author(s): Johnson, Kevin B, Miller, Randolph A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1473
The effective coordination of health care relies on communication of confidential information about consumers between different health and community care services. However, consumers must be able to give or withhold "e-Consent" to those who wish to access their electronic health information. There are several possible forms for e-Consent. In the general consent model, a patient provides blanket consent for access to his or her information by an organization for all [...]
Author(s): Coiera, Enrico, Clarke, Roger
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1480
Author(s): Bhosle, Monali, Sansgiry, Sujit S
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1469
To determine clinicians' (doctors', nurses', and allied health professionals') "actual" and "reported" use of a point-of-care online information retrieval system; and to make an assessment of the extent to which use is related to direct patient care by testing two hypotheses: hypothesis 1: clinicians use online evidence primarily to support clinical decisions relating to direct patient care; and hypothesis 2: clinicians use online evidence predominantly for research and continuing education.
Author(s): Westbrook, Johanna I, Gosling, A Sophie, Coiera, Enrico
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1385
Clinicians generally record medical narrative data, such as current complaints, physical examination, and progress notes, as free text in paper-based medical records. The medical narrative involves heterogeneous and detailed data that include the description of (multiple) occurrences of medical findings or symptoms that may progress over time. Structured, electronic recording of narrative data would facilitate the use of these data for research. The authors' OpenSDE application supports clinicians with the [...]
Author(s): Los, Renske K, van Ginneken, Astrid M, de Wilde, Marcel, van der Lei, Johan
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1375
Medical error reduction is an international issue, as is the implementation of patient care information systems (PCISs) as a potential means to achieving it. As researchers conducting separate studies in the United States, The Netherlands, and Australia, using similar qualitative methods to investigate implementing PCISs, the authors have encountered many instances in which PCIS applications seem to foster errors rather than reduce their likelihood. The authors describe the kinds of [...]
Author(s): Ash, Joan S, Berg, Marc, Coiera, Enrico
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1471
To determine the availability of inpatient computerized physician order entry in U.S. hospitals and the degree to which physicians are using it.
Author(s): Ash, Joan S, Gorman, Paul N, Seshadri, Veena, Hersh, William R
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1427
Computerized physician order entry (CPOE) is touted as a major improvement in patient safety, primarily as a result of the Institute of Medicine's 1999 report on medical errors and the subsequent formation of the "Leapfrog Group" of companies to preferentially direct their employees' health care to those institutions that install such systems (as part of directives that "Leapfrog" feels will improve patient care). Although the literature suggests that such systems [...]
Author(s): Berger, Robert G, Kichak, J P
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1411
Syndromic surveillance refers to methods relying on detection of individual and population health indicators that are discernible before confirmed diagnoses are made. In particular, prior to the laboratory confirmation of an infectious disease, ill persons may exhibit behavioral patterns, symptoms, signs, or laboratory findings that can be tracked through a variety of data sources. Syndromic surveillance systems are being developed locally, regionally, and nationally. The efforts have been largely directed [...]
Author(s): Mandl, Kenneth D, Overhage, J Marc, Wagner, Michael M, Lober, William B, Sebastiani, Paola, Mostashari, Farzad, Pavlin, Julie A, Gesteland, Per H, Treadwell, Tracee, Koski, Eileen, Hutwagner, Lori, Buckeridge, David L, Aller, Raymond D, Grannis, Shaun
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1356
There are constraints embedded in medical record structure that limit use by patients in self-directed disease management. Through systematic review of the literature from a critical perspective, four characteristics that either enhance or mitigate the influence of medical record structure on patient utilization of an electronic patient record (EPR) system have been identified: environmental pressures, physician centeredness, collaborative organizational culture, and patient centeredness. An evaluation framework is proposed for use [...]
Author(s): Winkelman, Warren J, Leonard, Kevin J
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1274