Physician satisfaction with order entry systems.
Author(s): Patterson, Robert
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1022
Author(s): Patterson, Robert
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1022
This study sought to assess the ability of medical and nurse practitioner students to use MEDLINE to obtain evidence for answering clinical questions and to identify factors associated with the successful answering of questions.
Author(s): Hersh, William R, Crabtree, M Katherine, Hickam, David H, Sacherek, Lynetta, Friedman, Charles P, Tidmarsh, Patricia, Mosbaek, Craig, Kraemer, Dale
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m0996
Despite the fact that nursing informatics is entering its third decade as a specialty within nursing, many definitions still exist to describe the field. This paper offers a rationale for a definition for nursing informatics and a critical analysis of past definitions. An organizing framework of technology-oriented, conceptual, and role-oriented definitions is used to critique these definitions. Subsequently, a revised definition is proposed. This evolutionary definition integrates critical concepts from [...]
Author(s): Staggers, Nancy, Thompson, Cheryl Bagley
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m0946
Problems involving drug knowledge are one of the most common causes of serious medication errors. Although the information that clinicians need is often available somewhere, retrieving it expeditiously has been problematic. At the same time, clinicians are faced with an ever-expanding pharmacology knowledge base. Recently, point-of-care technology has become more widely available and more practical with the advent of handheld, or palmtop, computing. Therefore, the authors evaluated the clinical contribution [...]
Author(s): Rothschild, Jeffrey M, Lee, Thomas H, Bae, Taran, Bates, David W
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1001
The 2001 debate of the American College of Medical Informatics focused on the proposition that national regulatory mandate of computer-based provider order entry (CPOE), to take effect by the end of 2005, portends greater benefit than risk for health care delivery. Both sides accepted that provider order entry offers potential benefit. Those supporting the proposition emphasized public safety, noting that payers have little economic incentive to pay for quality and [...]
Author(s): Overhage, J Marc, Middleton, Blackford, Miller, Randolph A, Zielstorff, Rita D, Hersh, William R
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1081
Despite an increasing movement toward shared decision making and the incorporation of patients' preferences into health care decision making, little research has been done on the development and evaluation of support systems that help clinicians elicit and integrate patients' preferences into patient care. This study evaluates nurses' use of CHOICE, a handheld-computer-based support system for preference-based care planning, which assists nurses in eliciting patients' preferences for functional performance at the [...]
Author(s): Ruland, Cornelia M
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m0891
The goal of this study was to complete a literature-based needs assessment with regard to common pediatric problems encountered by pediatric health care providers (PHCPs) and families, and to develop a problem-based pediatric digital library to meet those needs. The needs assessment yielded 65 information sources. Common problems were identified and categorized, and the Internet was manually searched for authoritative Web sites. The created pediatric digital library (www.generalpediatrics.com) used a [...]
Author(s): D'Alessandro, Donna, Kingsley, Peggy
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m0991
Stanford's two decades of success in linking medical informatics and health services research in both training and investigational activities reflects advantageous geography and history as well as natural synergies in the two areas. Health services research and medical informatics at Stanford have long shared a quantitative, analytic orientation, along with linked administration, curriculum, and clinical activities. Both the medical informatics and the health services research curricula draw on diverse course [...]
Author(s): Shortliffe, Edward H, Garber, Alan M
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m0974
The events that followed the launch of Sputnik on Oct 4, 1957, provide a metaphor for the events that are following the first bioterroristic case of pulmonary anthrax in the United States. This paper uses that metaphor to elucidate the nature of the task ahead and to suggest questions such as, Can the goals of the biodefense effort be formulated as concisely and concretely as the goal of the space [...]
Author(s): Wagner, Michael M
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1049
The United States currently faces several new, concurrent large-scale health crises as a result of terrorist activity. In particular, three major health issues have risen sharply in urgency and public consciousness--bioterrorism, the threat of widespread delivery of agents of illness; mass disasters, local events that produce large numbers of casualties and overwhelm the usual capacity of health care delivery systems; and the delivery of optimal health care to remote military [...]
Author(s): Teich, Jonathan M, Wagner, Michael M, Mackenzie, Colin F, Schafer, Klaus O
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1055