The Chief Clinical Informatics Officer (CCIO).
Author(s): Kannry, Joseph, Fridsma, Doug
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocw034
Author(s): Kannry, Joseph, Fridsma, Doug
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocw034
Author(s): Ohno-Machado, Lucila
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocw043
The American Medical Informatics Association convened the 2014 Health Policy Invitational Meeting to develop recommendations for updates to current policies and to establish an informatics research agenda for personalizing medicine. In particular, the meeting focused on discussing informatics challenges related to personalizing care through the integration of genomic or other high-volume biomolecular data with data from clinical systems to make health care more efficient and effective. This report summarizes the [...]
Author(s): Wiley, Laura K, Tarczy-Hornoch, Peter, Denny, Joshua C, Freimuth, Robert R, Overby, Casey L, Shah, Nigam, Martin, Ross D, Sarkar, Indra Neil
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv111
The objective of the Strategic Health IT Advanced Research Project area four (SHARPn) was to develop open-source tools that could be used for the normalization of electronic health record (EHR) data for secondary use--specifically, for high throughput phenotyping. We describe the role of Intermountain Healthcare's Clinical Element Models ([CEMs] Intermountain Healthcare Health Services, Inc, Salt Lake City, Utah) as normalization "targets" within the project.
Author(s): Oniki, Thomas A, Zhuo, Ning, Beebe, Calvin E, Liu, Hongfang, Coyle, Joseph F, Parker, Craig G, Solbrig, Harold R, Marchant, Kyle, Kaggal, Vinod C, Chute, Christopher G, Huff, Stanley M
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv134
This article summarizes past and current data mining activities at the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
Author(s): Duggirala, Hesha J, Tonning, Joseph M, Smith, Ella, Bright, Roselie A, Baker, John D, Ball, Robert, Bell, Carlos, Bright-Ponte, Susan J, Botsis, Taxiarchis, Bouri, Khaled, Boyer, Marc, Burkhart, Keith, Condrey, G Steven, Chen, James J, Chirtel, Stuart, Filice, Ross W, Francis, Henry, Jiang, Hongying, Levine, Jonathan, Martin, David, Oladipo, Taiye, O'Neill, Rene, Palmer, Lee Anne M, Paredes, Antonio, Rochester, George, Sholtes, Deborah, Szarfman, Ana, Wong, Hui-Lee, Xu, Zhiheng, Kass-Hout, Taha
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv063
To answer a "grand challenge" in clinical decision support, the authors produced a recommender system that automatically data-mines inpatient decision support from electronic medical records (EMR), analogous to Netflix or Amazon.com's product recommender.
Author(s): Chen, Jonathan H, Podchiyska, Tanya, Altman, Russ B
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv091
Health information technology (HIT) has the potential to play a significant role in the management of cancer. The purpose of this review is to identify and examine empirical studies that investigate the impact of HIT in cancer care on different levels of the care continuum.
Author(s): Tarver, Will L, Menachemi, Nir
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv064
Social determinants of health significantly impact morbidity and mortality; however, physicians lack ready access to this information in patient care and population management. Just as traditional vital signs give providers a biometric assessment of any patient, "community vital signs" (Community VS) can provide an aggregated overview of the social and environmental factors impacting patient health. Knowing Community VS could inform clinical recommendations for individual patients, facilitate referrals to community services [...]
Author(s): Bazemore, Andrew W, Cottrell, Erika K, Gold, Rachel, Hughes, Lauren S, Phillips, Robert L, Angier, Heather, Burdick, Timothy E, Carrozza, Mark A, DeVoe, Jennifer E
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv088
Clinical documents made available for secondary use play an increasingly important role in discovery of clinical knowledge, development of research methods, and education. An important step in facilitating secondary use of clinical document collections is easy access to descriptions and samples that represent the content of the collections. This paper presents an approach to developing a collection of radiology examinations, including both the images and radiologist narrative reports, and making [...]
Author(s): Demner-Fushman, Dina, Kohli, Marc D, Rosenman, Marc B, Shooshan, Sonya E, Rodriguez, Laritza, Antani, Sameer, Thoma, George R, McDonald, Clement J
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv080
The transition of whole-exome and whole-genome sequencing (WES/WGS) from the research setting to routine clinical practice remains challenging.
Author(s): Shyr, Casper, Kushniruk, Andre, van Karnebeek, Clara D M, Wasserman, Wyeth W
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv053