Computer-based diagnostic support systems.
Author(s): Hay, W H
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.0040256
Author(s): Hay, W H
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.0040256
To compare three potential sources of controlled clinical terminology (READ codes version 3.1, SNOMED International, and Unified Medical Language System (UMLS) version 1.6) relative to attributes of completeness, clinical taxonomy, administrative mapping, term definitions and clarity (duplicate coding rate).
Author(s): Campbell, J R, Carpenter, P, Sneiderman, C, Cohn, S, Chute, C G, Warren, J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040238
Institutions all want electronic medical record (EMR) systems. They want them to solve their record movement problems, to improve the quality and coherence of the care process, to automate guidelines and care pathways to assist clinical research, outcomes management, and process improvement. EMRs are very difficult to construct because the existing electronic data sources, e.g., laboratory systems, pharmacy systems, and physician dictation systems, reside on many isolated islands with differing [...]
Author(s): McDonald, C J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040213
The domain of medical imaging is anatomy. Therefore, anatomic knowledge should be a rational basis for organizing and analyzing images. The goals of the Digital Anatomist Program at the University of Washington include the development of an anatomically based software framework for organizing, analyzing, visualizing and utilizing biomedical information. The framework is based on representations for both spatial and symbolic anatomic knowledge, and is being implemented in a distributed architecture [...]
Author(s): Brinkley, J F, Rosse, C
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040165
A national public and private "grand challenge" initiative should be undertaken to assure the American public that the telecommunications and computing revolutions improve health care, health education, and biomedical and health services research, and secure accountability for cost, quality, and access. The initiative should focus on meeting the needs of the patient and society at large. It needs to be a national vision, but it also ought to have regional [...]
Author(s): Detmer, D E
DOI:
The importance of demonstrating the effect of integrating electronic medical records into clinical practice, and methods for conducting the studies necessary to do so, are presented as a model that may be applicable to other aspects of the Integrated Advanced Information Management System (IAIMS). Integrated electronic medical record (EMR) systems offer the prospect of both improving the quality of health care by reducing variation in processes and outcomes and lowering [...]
Author(s): Tierney, W M, Overhage, J M, McDonald, C J
DOI:
The success of IAIMSs and other information technology plans depends to a great extent on the fit between the planning process and the nature of the organization. Planning processes differ as a function of both plurality of goals and the degree to which technology or the external environment changes. If all members of an organization share a common goal and the organization is in a relatively stable environment, the classic [...]
Author(s): Frisse, M
DOI:
To evaluate use of information resources during the first year of IAIMS implementation at the Yale-New Haven Medical Center. The evaluation asked: (1) Which information resources are being used? (2) Who uses information resources? (3) Where are information resources used? (4) Are multiple sources of information being integrated?
Author(s): Grajek, S E, Calarco, P, Frawley, S J, McKay, J, Miller, P L, Paton, J A, Roderer, N K, Sullivan, J E
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040138
To identify impediments to the successful transfer and implementation of packaged information systems through large, divisionalized health services.
Author(s): Southon, F C, Sauer, C, Grant, C N
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040112
People and organizational issues are critical in both implementing medical informatics systems and in dealing with the altered organizations that new systems often create. The people and organizational issues area--like medical informatics itself--is a blend of many disciplines. The academic disciplines of psychology, sociology, social psychology, social anthropology, organizational behavior and organizational development, management, and cognitive sciences are rich with research with significant potential to ease the introduction and on-going [...]
Author(s): Lorenzi, N M, Riley, R T, Blyth, A J, Southon, G, Dixon, B J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040079