Building a National Health IT System from the middle out.
Author(s): Coiera, Enrico
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M3183
Author(s): Coiera, Enrico
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M3183
Alerts and prompts represent promising types of decision support in electronic prescribing to tackle inadequacies in prescribing. A systematic review was conducted to evaluate the efficacy of computerized drug alerts and prompts searching EMBASE, CINHAL, MEDLINE, and PsychINFO up to May 2007. Studies assessing the impact of electronic alerts and prompts on clinicians' prescribing behavior were selected and categorized by decision support type. Most alerts and prompts (23 out of [...]
Author(s): Schedlbauer, Angela, Prasad, Vibhore, Mulvaney, Caroline, Phansalkar, Shobha, Stanton, Wendy, Bates, David W, Avery, Anthony J
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2910
OBJECTIVE To determine whether a computerized clinical decision support system providing patient-specific recommendations in real-time improves the quality of prescribing for long-term care residents with renal insufficiency. DESIGN Randomized trial within the long-stay units of a large long-term care facility. Randomization was within blocks by unit type. Alerts related to medication prescribing for residents with renal insufficiency were displayed to prescribers in the intervention units and hidden but tracked in [...]
Author(s): Field, Terry S, Rochon, Paula, Lee, Monica, Gavendo, Linda, Baril, Joann L, Gurwitz, Jerry H
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2981
OBJECTIVE Electronic health records (EHRs) have potential to improve quality and safety, but many physicians do not use these systems to full capacity. The objective of this study was to determine whether this usage gap is narrowing over time. DESIGN Follow-up mail survey of 1,144 physicians in Massachusetts who completed a 2005 survey. MEASUREMENTS Adoption of EHRs and availability and use of 10 EHR functions. RESULTS The response rate was [...]
Author(s): Simon, Steven R, Soran, Christine S, Kaushal, Rainu, Jenter, Chelsea A, Volk, Lynn A, Burdick, Elisabeth, Cleary, Paul D, Orav, E John, Poon, Eric G, Bates, David W
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M3081
OBJECTIVE Automated and disease-specific classification of textual clinical discharge summaries is of great importance in human life science, as it helps physicians to make medical studies by providing statistically relevant data for analysis. This can be further facilitated if, at the labeling of discharge summaries, semantic labels are also extracted from text, such as whether a given disease is present, absent, questionable in a patient, or is unmentioned in the [...]
Author(s): Solt, Illés, Tikk, Domonkos, Gál, Viktor, Kardkovács, Zsolt T
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M3087
OBJECTIVE The authors present a system developed for the Challenge in Natural Language Processing for Clinical Data-the i2b2 obesity challenge, whose aim was to automatically identify the status of obesity and 15 related co-morbidities in patients using their clinical discharge summaries. The challenge consisted of two tasks, textual and intuitive. The textual task was to identify explicit references to the diseases, whereas the intuitive task focused on the prediction of [...]
Author(s): Yang, Hui, Spasic, Irena, Keane, John A, Nenadic, Goran
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M3096
In order to survey, facilitate, and evaluate studies of medical language processing on clinical narratives, i2b2 (Informatics for Integrating Biology to the Bedside) organized its second challenge and workshop. This challenge focused on automatically extracting information on obesity and fifteen of its most common comorbidities from patient discharge summaries. For each patient, obesity and any of the comorbidities could be Present, Absent, or Questionable (i.e., possible) in the patient, or [...]
Author(s): Uzuner, Ozlem
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M3115
CONTEXT Telemedicine is a promising but largely unproven technology for providing case management services to patients with chronic conditions and lower access to care. OBJECTIVES To examine the effectiveness of a telemedicine intervention to achieve clinical management goals in older, ethnically diverse, medically underserved patients with diabetes. DESIGN, Setting, and Patients A randomized controlled trial was conducted, comparing telemedicine case management to usual care, with blinded outcome evaluation, in 1,665 [...]
Author(s): Shea, Steven, Weinstock, Ruth S, Teresi, Jeanne A, Palmas, Walter, Starren, Justin, Cimino, James J, Lai, Albert M, Field, Lesley, Morin, Philip C, Goland, Robin, Izquierdo, Roberto E, Ebner, Susana, Silver, Stephanie, Petkova, Eva, Kong, Jian, Eimicke, Joseph P, ,
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M3157
Emergency department crowding threatens quality and access to health care, and a method of accurately forecasting near-future crowding should enable novel ways to alleviate the problem. The authors sought to implement and validate the previously developed ForecastED discrete event simulation for real-time forecasting of emergency department crowding.
Author(s): Hoot, Nathan R, Leblanc, Larry J, Jones, Ian, Levin, Scott R, Zhou, Chuan, Gadd, Cynthia S, Aronsky, Dominik
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2772
The authors summarize their experience in iteratively testing the adequacy of three versions of the Health Level Seven (HL7) Logical Observation Identifiers Names and Codes (LOINC) Clinical Document Ontology (CDO) to represent document names at Columbia University Medical Center. The percentage of documents fully represented increased from 23.4% (Version 1) to 98.5% (Version 3). The proportion of unique representations increased from 7.9% (Analysis 1) to 39.4% (Analysis 4); the proportion [...]
Author(s): Hyun, Sookyung, Shapiro, Jason S, Melton, Genevieve, Schlegel, Cara, Stetson, Peter D, Johnson, Stephen B, Bakken, Suzanne
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2821