HIT or Miss - Studying Failures to Enable Success.
Author(s): Leviss, J
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2011-03-IE-0020
Author(s): Leviss, J
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2011-03-IE-0020
Multi-disciplinary and multi-site biomedical research programs frequently require infrastructures capable of enabling the collection, management, analysis, and dissemination of heterogeneous, multi-dimensional, and distributed data and knowledge collections spanning organizational boundaries. We report on the design and initial deployment of an extensible biomedical informatics platform that is intended to address such requirements.
Author(s): Payne, P, Ervin, D, Dhaval, R, Borlawsky, T, Lai, A
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2011-02-RA-0014
Interface terminologies used in electronic health records must be re-evaluated and revised to reflect current health care practice and knowledge. To enable future revisions of the Omaha System Intervention Scheme, investigators evaluated formal semantic structure of target terms and concept duplication of problem and target terms. Using linguistic principles and qualitative analysis, five themes were found. A multidimensional formal semantic structure for the intervention target term was proposed. Concept duplication [...]
Author(s): Monsen, K, Melton-Meaux, G, Timm, J, Westra, B, Kerr, M, Raman, N, Farri, O, Hart, C, Martin, K
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2010-12-RA-0076
Computer-based clinical decision support (CDS) systems have been shown to improve quality of care and workflow efficiency, and health care reform legislation relies on electronic health records and CDS systems to improve the cost and quality of health care in the United States; however, the heterogeneity of CDS content and infrastructure of CDS systems across sites is not well known.
Author(s): Kantor, M, Wright, A, Burton, M, Fraser, G, Krall, M, Maviglia, S, Mohammed-Rajput, N, Simonaitis, L, Sonnenberg, F, Middleton, B
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2011-02-RA-0012
Given relatively less favorable health outcomes in rural Alabama, electronic health records (EHRs) have an even greater potential to improve quality and alleviate disparities if meaningfully used.
Author(s): Houser, S H, Au, D, Weech-Maldonado, R
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2011-01-RA-0001
Emergency physicians are trained to make decisions quickly and with limited patient information. Health Information Exchange (HIE) has the potential to improve emergency care by bringing relevant patient data from non-affiliated organizations to the bedside. NYCLIX (New York CLinical Information eXchange) offers HIE functionality among multiple New York metropolitan area provider organizations and has pilot users in several member emergency departments (EDs).
Author(s): Genes, N, Shapiro, J, Vaidya, S, Kuperman, G
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2011-02-CR-0010
To identify and summarize the requirements of an optimized CPOE application for pediatric intensive care.
Author(s): Castellanos, I, Rellensmann, G, Scharf, J, Bürkle, T
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2011-08-RA-0051
To determine 1) the extent to which paper-based and computer-based environments influence the sufficiency of parents' report of child behaviors and the accuracy of data on current medications, and 2) the impact of parents' health literacy on the quality of information produced.
Author(s): Porter, S C, Guo, C-Y, Molino, J, Toomey, S L, Chan, E
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2011-10-RA-0062
Medical eponyms are medical words derived from people's names. Eponyms, especially similar sounding eponyms, may be confusing to people trying to use them because the terms themselves do not contain physiologically descriptive words about the condition they refer to. Through the use of electronic health records (EHRs), embedded applied clinical informatics tools including synonyms and pick lists that include physiologically descriptive terms associated with any eponym appearing in the EHR [...]
Author(s): Baskaran, L N Guptha Munugoor, Greco, P J, Kaelber, D C
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2012-05-CR-0019
Smartphones are increasingly important for clinical decision support, but smartphone and Internet use are limited by cost or coverage in many settings. txt2MEDLINE provides access to published medical evidence by text messaging. Previous studies have evaluated this approach, but we found no comparisons with other tools in this format.
Author(s): Sheets, L, Callaghan, F, Gavino, A, Liu, F, Fontelo, P
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2012-06-RA-0024