Commentary on G. Octo Barnett's Report to the Computer Research Study Section.
Author(s): Lindberg, Donald A B
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2022
Author(s): Lindberg, Donald A B
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2022
Laboratory results provide necessary information for the management of ambulatory patients. To realize the benefits of an electronic health record (EHR) and coded laboratory data (e.g., decision support and improved data access and display), results from laboratories that are external to the health care enterprise need to be integrated with internal results. We describe the development and clinical impact of integrating external results into the EHR at Intermountain Health Care [...]
Author(s): Staes, Catherine J, Bennett, Sterling T, Evans, R Scott, Narus, Scott P, Huff, Stanley M, Sorensen, John B
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1813
Computerized drug prescribing alerts can improve patient safety, but are often overridden because of poor specificity and alert overload. Our objective was to improve clinician acceptance of drug alerts by designing a selective set of drug alerts for the ambulatory care setting and minimizing workflow disruptions by designating only critical to high-severity alerts to be interruptive to clinician workflow. The alerts were presented to clinicians using computerized prescribing within an [...]
Author(s): Shah, Nidhi R, Seger, Andrew C, Seger, Diane L, Fiskio, Julie M, Kuperman, Gilad J, Blumenfeld, Barry, Recklet, Elaine G, Bates, David W, Gandhi, Tejal K
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1868
Understanding the effect of a given intervention on the patient's health outcome is one of the key elements in providing optimal patient care. This study presents a methodology for automatic identification of outcomes-related information in medical text and evaluates its potential in satisfying clinical information needs related to health care outcomes.
Author(s): Demner-Fushman, Dina, Few, Barbara, Hauser, Susan E, Thoma, George
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1911
Confusion about patients' medication regimens during the hospital admission and discharge process accounts for many preventable and serious medication errors. Many organizations have begun to redesign their clinical processes to address this patient safety concern. Partners HealthCare, an integrated delivery network in Boston, Massachusetts, has answered this interdisciplinary challenge by leveraging its multiple outpatient electronic medical records (EMR) and inpatient computerized provider order entry (CPOE) systems to facilitate the process [...]
Author(s): Poon, Eric G, Blumenfeld, Barry, Hamann, Claus, Turchin, Alexander, Graydon-Baker, Erin, McCarthy, Patricia C, Poikonen, John, Mar, Perry, Schnipper, Jeffrey L, Hallisey, Robert K, Smith, Sandra, McCormack, Christine, Paterno, Marilyn, Coley, Christopher M, Karson, Andrew, Chueh, Henry C, Van Putten, Cheryl, Millar, Sally G, Clapp, Margaret, Bhan, Ishir, Meyer, Gregg S, Gandhi, Tejal K, Broverman, Carol A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2142
The authors performed this study to determine the accuracy of several text classification methods to categorize wrist x-ray reports. We randomly sampled 751 textual wrist x-ray reports. Two expert reviewers rated the presence (n = 301) or absence (n = 450) of an acute fracture of wrist. We developed two information retrieval (IR) text classification methods and a machine learning method using a support vector machine (TC-1). In cross-validation on [...]
Author(s): de Bruijn, Berry, Cranney, Ann, O'Donnell, Siobhan, Martin, Joel D, Forster, Alan J
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1995
Many Norwegian hospitals that are equipped with an electronic medical record (EMR) system now have proceeded to withdraw the paper-based medical record from clinical workflow. In two previous survey-based studies on the effect of removing the paper-based medical record on the work of physicians, nurses and medical secretaries, we concluded that to scan and eliminate the paper based record was feasible, but that the medical secretaries were the group that [...]
Author(s): Lium, Jan-Tore, Laerum, Hallvard, Schulz, Tom, Faxvaag, Arild
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2108
Authors developed a picture-graphics display for pulmonary function to present typical respiratory data used in perioperative and intensive care environments. The display utilizes color, shape and emergent alerting to highlight abnormal pulmonary physiology. The display serves as an adjunct to traditional operating room displays and monitors.
Author(s): Wachter, S Blake, Johnson, Ken, Albert, Robert, Syroid, Noah, Drews, Frank, Westenskow, Dwayne
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2123
Author(s): Rosenbloom, S Trent
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2122
Acquiring and representing biomedical knowledge is an increasingly important component of contemporary bioinformatics. A critical step of the process is to identify and retrieve relevant documents among the vast volume of modern biomedical literature efficiently. In the real world, many information retrieval tasks are difficult because of high data dimensionality and the lack of annotated examples to train a retrieval algorithm. Under such a scenario, the performance of information retrieval [...]
Author(s): Lu, Xinghua, Zheng, Bin, Velivelli, Atulya, Zhai, Chengxiang
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2051