Physician PDA use and the HIPAA Privacy Rule.
Author(s): Pancoast, Paul E, Patrick, Timothy B, Mitchell, Joyce A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1388
Author(s): Pancoast, Paul E, Patrick, Timothy B, Mitchell, Joyce A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1388
Limited information is available on personal digital assistant (PDA) use patterns in medical settings. Recognizing that use patterns may be important considerations for development of handheld-based information systems, the authors characterized PDA use at their institution. A survey was mailed to all internal medicine physicians at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, in May 2002. PDA use prevalence, user demographics, hardware preferences, and work setting and application use frequencies were assessed [...]
Author(s): McLeod, Thomas G, Ebbert, Jon O, Lymp, James F
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1313
Medical error reporting systems are important information sources for designing strategies to improve the safety of health care. Applied Strategies for Improving Patient Safety (ASIPS) is a multi-institutional, practice-based research project that collects and analyzes data on primary care medical errors and develops interventions to reduce error. The voluntary ASIPS Patient Safety Reporting System captures anonymous and confidential reports of medical errors. Confidential reports, which are quickly de-identified, provide better [...]
Author(s): Pace, Wilson D, Staton, Elizabeth W, Higgins, Gregory S, Main, Deborah S, West, David R, Harris, Daniel M, ,
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1339
(1) To evaluate preliminary effects of a computerized support system on congruence between patients' reported symptoms and preferences and those addressed in the patient consultation and (2) to investigate the system's ease of use, time requirements, and patient satisfaction.
Author(s): Ruland, Cornelia M, White, Thomas, Stevens, Marguerite, Fanciullo, Gilbert, Khilani, Samir M
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1365
To determine whether sales of electrolyte products contain a signal of outbreaks of respiratory and diarrheal disease in children and, if so, how much earlier a signal relative to hospital diagnoses.
Author(s): Hogan, William R, Tsui, Fu-Chiang, Ivanov, Oleg, Gesteland, Per H, Grannis, Shaun, Overhage, J Marc, Robinson, J Michael, Wagner, Michael M, ,
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1377
Peer-reviewed publication of scientific research results represents the most important means of their communication. The authors have annually reviewed a large heterogeneous set of papers to produce the International Medical Informatics Association (IMIA) Yearbook of Medical Informatics. To support an objective and high-quality review process, the authors attempted to provide reviewers with a set of refined quality criteria, comprised of 80 general criteria and an additional 60 criteria for specific [...]
Author(s): Ammenwerth, Elske, Wolff, Astrid C, Knaup, Petra, Ulmer, Hanno, Skonetzki, Stefan, van Bemmel, Jan H, McCray, Alexa T, Haux, Reinhold, Kulikowski, Casimir
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1062
The noninquisitive critiquing system, AsthmaCritic, uses routinely recorded electronic patient data to select and analyze records of patients with asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The system generates critiquing comments and adds these comments to the patient record. The system was developed by using and expanding an existing generic critiquing system. After a brief overview of the system, this report focuses on the authors' design choices in light of [...]
Author(s): Kuilboer, Manon M, van Wijk, Marc A M, Mosseveld, Mees, van der Lei, Johan
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1273
Paper-based and electronic patient records generally are used in parallel to support different tasks. Many studies comparing their quality do not report sufficiently on the methods used. Few studies refer to the patient. Instead, most regard the paper record as the gold standard. Focusing on quality criteria, the current study compared the two records patient by patient, presuming that each might hold unique advantages. For surgical patients at a nonuniversity [...]
Author(s): Stausberg, Jurgen, Koch, Dietrich, Ingenerf, Josef, Betzler, Michael
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1290
The aim of this study was to create a classifier for automatic detection of chest radiograph reports consistent with the mediastinal findings of inhalational anthrax.
Author(s): Chapman, Wendy Webber, Cooper, Gregory F, Hanbury, Paul, Chapman, Brian E, Harrison, Lee H, Wagner, Michael M
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1330
The National Retail Data Monitor receives data daily from 10,000 stores, including pharmacies, that sell health care products. These stores belong to national chains that process sales data centrally and utilize Universal Product Codes and scanners to collect sales information at the cash register. The high degree of retail sales data automation enables the monitor to collect information from thousands of store locations in near to real time for use [...]
Author(s): Wagner, Michael M, Robinson, J Michael, Tsui, Fu-Chiang, Espino, Jeremy U, Hogan, William R
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1357