Presentation of the 2007 Morris F. Collen award to William W. Stead, MD, including comments from recipient.
Author(s): Masys, Daniel R, Ellison, Donald, Stead, William W
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2739
Author(s): Masys, Daniel R, Ellison, Donald, Stead, William W
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2739
This paper presents a multiple perspectives model of clinical information system implementation, the CONTEXTual Implementation Model (CIM). Although other implementation models have been developed, few are grounded in data and others fail to take adequate account of the clinical environment and users' requirements.
Author(s): Callen, Joanne L, Braithwaite, Jeffrey, Westbrook, Johanna I
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2468
To investigate the agreement among clinical experts in their judgments of monitoring data with respect to artifacts, and to examine the effect of reference standards that consist of individual and joint expert judgments on the performance of artifact filters.
Author(s): Verduijn, Marion, Peek, Niels, de Keizer, Nicolette F, van Lieshout, Erik-Jan, de Pont, Anne-Cornelie J M, Schultz, Marcus J, de Jonge, Evert, de Mol, Bas A J M
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2493
Complete patient health information that is available where and when it is needed is essential to providers and patients and improves healthcare quality and patient safety. VA and DoD have built on their previous experience in patient data exchange to establish data standards and terminology services to enable real-time bi-directional computable (i.e., encoded) data exchange and achieve semantic interoperability in compliance with recommended national standards and the eGov initiative. The [...]
Author(s): Bouhaddou, Omar, Warnekar, Pradnya, Parrish, Fola, Do, Nhan, Mandel, Jack, Kilbourne, John, Lincoln, Michael J
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2498
Electronic mailing systems (e-mail) are an important means to disseminate information within electronic networks. However, in large business communities including the hectic environment of hospitals it may be difficult to induce account holders to read the e-mail. In two mailings disseminated in a large university hospital we evaluated the impact of e-mail layout (three e-mail text versions, two e-mails with graphics) on the willingness of its approximately 6500 recipients to [...]
Author(s): Kaltschmidt, Jens, Schmitt, Simon P W, Pruszydlo, Markus G, Haefeli, Walter E
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2503
To develop software infrastructure that will provide support for discovery, characterization, integrated access, and management of diverse and disparate collections of information sources, analysis methods, and applications in biomedical research.
Author(s): Oster, Scott, Langella, Stephen, Hastings, Shannon, Ervin, David, Madduri, Ravi, Phillips, Joshua, Kurc, Tahsin, Siebenlist, Frank, Covitz, Peter, Shanbhag, Krishnakant, Foster, Ian, Saltz, Joel
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2522
Unstructured electronic information sources, such as news reports, are proving to be valuable inputs for public health surveillance. However, staying abreast of current disease outbreaks requires scouring a continually growing number of disparate news sources and alert services, resulting in information overload. Our objective is to address this challenge through the HealthMap.org Web application, an automated system for querying, filtering, integrating and visualizing unstructured reports on disease outbreaks.
Author(s): Freifeld, Clark C, Mandl, Kenneth D, Reis, Ben Y, Brownstein, John S
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2544
The Biomedical Research Integrated Domain Group (BRIDG) project is a collaborative initiative between the National Cancer Institute (NCI), the Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium (CDISC), the Regulated Clinical Research Information Management Technical Committee (RCRIM TC) of Health Level 7 (HL7), and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to develop a model of the shared understanding of the semantics of clinical research.
Author(s): Fridsma, Douglas B, Evans, Julie, Hastak, Smita, Mead, Charles N
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2556
This paper presents a model designed to enable rapid detection and assessment of biological threats that may require swift intervention by the international public health community.
Author(s): Wilson, James M, Polyak, Marat G, Blake, Jane W, Collmann, Jeff
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2558
We conducted a prospective observational study to (1) determine usage and construct validity of a method to gauge the cognitive impact of information derived from daily e-mail, and (2) describe self-reported impacts of research-based synopses (InfoPOEMs) delivered as e-mail. Ratings of InfoPOEMs using an Impact assessment scale provided (a) data on usage of the impact assessment method, (b) reports of impact by InfoPOEM and by doctor and (c) data for [...]
Author(s): Grad, Roland M, Pluye, Pierre, Mercer, Jay, Marlow, Bernard, Beauchamp, Marie-Eve, Shulha, Michael, Johnson-Lafleur, Janique, Wood-Dauphinee, Sharon
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2563