The potential value of social determinants of health in predicting health outcomes.
Author(s): Ancker, Jessica S, Kim, Min-Hyung, Zhang, Yiye, Zhang, Yongkang, Pathak, Jyotishman
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy061
Author(s): Ancker, Jessica S, Kim, Min-Hyung, Zhang, Yiye, Zhang, Yongkang, Pathak, Jyotishman
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy061
Medical privacy policies, which are clear-cut for adults and young children, become ambiguous during adolescence. Yet medical organizations must establish unambiguous rules about patient and parental access to electronic patient portals. We conducted a national interview study to characterize the diversity in adolescent portal policies across a range of institutions and determine the factors influencing decisions about these policies.
Author(s): Sharko, Marianne, Wilcox, Lauren, Hong, Matthew K, Ancker, Jessica S
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy042
Health informatics interventions are designed to help people avoid, recover from, or cope with disease and disability, or to improve the quality and safety of healthcare. Unfortunately, they pose a risk of producing intervention-generated inequalities (IGI) by disproportionately benefiting more advantaged people. In this perspective paper, we discuss characteristics of health-related interventions known to produce IGI, explain why health informatics interventions are particularly vulnerable to this phenomenon, and describe safeguards [...]
Author(s): Veinot, Tiffany C, Mitchell, Hannah, Ancker, Jessica S
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy052
This study reports the development and psychometric evaluation of the Smartphone for Clinical Work Scale (SCWS) to measure nurses' use of smartphones for work purposes.
Author(s): Bautista, John Robert, Rosenthal, Sonny, Lin, Trisha Tsui-Chuan, Theng, Yin-Leng
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy044
Identify barriers impacting the time consuming and error fraught process of medication reconciliation. Design and implement an electronic medication management system where patient and trusted healthcare proxies can participate in establishing and maintaining an inclusive and up-to-date list of medications.
Author(s): Pandolfe, Frank, Wright, Adam, Slack, Warner V, Safran, Charles
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy047
The installation of EHR systems can disrupt operations at clinical practice sites, but also lead to improvements in information availability. We examined how the installation of an ambulatory EHR at OB/GYN practices and its subsequent interface with an inpatient perinatal EHR affected providers' satisfaction with the transmission of clinical information and patients' ratings of their care experience.
Author(s): Meyerhoefer, Chad D, Sherer, Susan A, Deily, Mary E, Chou, Shin-Yi, Guo, Xiaohui, Chen, Jie, Sheinberg, Michael, Levick, Donald
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy048
Review the existing studies including an assessment tool/method to assess the quality of mHealth apps; extract their criteria; and provide a classification of the collected criteria.
Author(s): Nouri, Rasool, R Niakan Kalhori, Sharareh, Ghazisaeedi, Marjan, Marchand, Guillaume, Yasini, Mobin
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy050
We describe current practices of ethics-related data governance in large neuro-ICT projects, identify gaps in current practice, and put forward recommendations on how to collaborate ethically in complex regulatory and normative contexts.
Author(s): Stahl, Bernd Carsten, Rainey, Stephen, Harris, Emma, Fothergill, B Tyr
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy040
To examine the effects of graphical formats and age on consumers' comprehension and perceptions of the use of self-monitoring test results.
Author(s): Tao, Da, Yuan, Juan, Qu, Xingda
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy046
Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a chronic condition affecting over 100 000 individuals in the United States, predominantly from vulnerable populations. Clinical practice guidelines, written for providers, have low adherence. This study explored knowledge about guidelines; desire for guidelines; and how technology could support guideline awareness and adherence, examining current technology uses, and user preferences to inform design of a patient-centered guidelines application in a chronic disease.
Author(s): Utrankar, Amol, Mayo-Gamble, Tilicia L, Allen, Whitney, Novak, Laurie, Kassim, Adetola A, Bonnet, Kemberlee, Schlundt, David, Murry, Velma M, Jackson, Gretchen Purcell, DeBaun, Michael, Cronin, Robert M
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy036