Building a National Health IT System from the middle out.
Author(s): Coiera, Enrico
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M3183
Author(s): Coiera, Enrico
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M3183
A systematic literature review was performed to identify variables promoting consumer health information technology (CHIT) acceptance among patients. The electronic bibliographic databases Web of Science, Business Source Elite, CINAHL, Communication and Mass Media Complete, MEDLINE, PsycArticles, and PsycInfo were searched. A cited reference search of articles meeting the inclusion criteria was also conducted to reduce misses. Fifty-two articles met the selection criteria. Among them, 94 different variables were tested for [...]
Author(s): Or, Calvin K L, Karsh, Ben-Tzion
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2888
Alerts and prompts represent promising types of decision support in electronic prescribing to tackle inadequacies in prescribing. A systematic review was conducted to evaluate the efficacy of computerized drug alerts and prompts searching EMBASE, CINHAL, MEDLINE, and PsychINFO up to May 2007. Studies assessing the impact of electronic alerts and prompts on clinicians' prescribing behavior were selected and categorized by decision support type. Most alerts and prompts (23 out of [...]
Author(s): Schedlbauer, Angela, Prasad, Vibhore, Mulvaney, Caroline, Phansalkar, Shobha, Stanton, Wendy, Bates, David W, Avery, Anthony J
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2910
OBJECTIVE The authors previously implemented an electronic heart failure registry at a large academic hospital to identify heart failure patients and to connect these patients with appropriate discharge services. Despite significant improvements in patient identification and connection rates, time to connection remained high, with an average delay of 3.2 days from the time patients were admitted to the time connections were made. Our objective for this current study was to [...]
Author(s): Zai, Adrian H, Farr, Kit M, Grant, Richard W, Mort, Elizabeth, Ferris, Timothy G, Chueh, Henry C
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2977
OBJECTIVE To compare the experiences of e-prescribing users and nonusers regarding prescription safety and workload and to assess the use of information from two e-prescribing standards (for medication history and formulary and benefit information), as they are implemented. DESIGN Cross-sectional survey of physicians who either had installed or were awaiting installation of one of two commercial e-prescribing systems. MEASUREMENTS Perceptions about medication history and formulary and benefit information among all [...]
Author(s): Wang, C Jason, Patel, Mihir H, Schueth, Anthony J, Bradley, Melissa, Wu, Shinyi, Crosson, Jesse C, Glassman, Peter A, Bell, Douglas S
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2998
OBJECTIVE Electronic health records (EHRs) have potential to improve quality and safety, but many physicians do not use these systems to full capacity. The objective of this study was to determine whether this usage gap is narrowing over time. DESIGN Follow-up mail survey of 1,144 physicians in Massachusetts who completed a 2005 survey. MEASUREMENTS Adoption of EHRs and availability and use of 10 EHR functions. RESULTS The response rate was [...]
Author(s): Simon, Steven R, Soran, Christine S, Kaushal, Rainu, Jenter, Chelsea A, Volk, Lynn A, Burdick, Elisabeth, Cleary, Paul D, Orav, E John, Poon, Eric G, Bates, David W
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M3081
OBJECTIVE Evaluate the effectiveness of a simple rule-based approach in classifying medical discharge summaries according to indicators for obesity and 15 associated co-morbidities as part of the 2008 i2b2 Obesity Challenge. METHODS The authors applied a rule-based approach that looked for occurrences of morbidity-related keywords and identified the types of assertions in which those keywords occurred. The documents were then classified using a simple scoring algorithm based on a mapping [...]
Author(s): Mishra, Ninad K, Cummo, David M, Arnzen, James J, Bonander, Jason
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M3086
OBJECTIVE The authors developed a natural language processing (NLP) framework that could be used to extract clinical findings and diagnoses from dictated physician documentation. DESIGN De-identified documentation was made available by i2b2 Bio-informatics research group as a part of their NLP challenge focusing on obesity and its co-morbidities. The authors describe their approach, which used a combination of concept detection, context validation, and the application of a variety of rules [...]
Author(s): Ware, Henry, Mullett, Charles J, Jagannathan, V
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M3091
OBJECTIVE The authors present a system developed for the Challenge in Natural Language Processing for Clinical Data-the i2b2 obesity challenge, whose aim was to automatically identify the status of obesity and 15 related co-morbidities in patients using their clinical discharge summaries. The challenge consisted of two tasks, textual and intuitive. The textual task was to identify explicit references to the diseases, whereas the intuitive task focused on the prediction of [...]
Author(s): Yang, Hui, Spasic, Irena, Keane, John A, Nenadic, Goran
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M3096
OBJECTIVE In this study the authors describe the system submitted by the team of University of Szeged to the second i2b2 Challenge in Natural Language Processing for Clinical Data. The challenge focused on the development of automatic systems that analyzed clinical discharge summary texts and addressed the following question: "Who's obese and what co-morbidities do they (definitely/most likely) have?". Target diseases included obesity and its 15 most frequent comorbidities exhibited [...]
Author(s): Farkas, Richárd, Szarvas, György, Hegedus, István, Almási, Attila, Vincze, Veronika, Ormándi, Róbert, Busa-Fekete, Róbert
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M3097