Author(s): Stead, William W
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1523
Author(s): Stead, William W
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1523
E-mail use in the clinical setting has been slow to diffuse for several reasons, including providers' concerns about patients' inappropriate and inefficient use of the technology. This study examined the content of a random sample of patient-physician e-mail messages to determine the validity of those concerns.
Author(s): White, Casey B, Moyer, Cheryl A, Stern, David T, Katz, Steven J
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1445
This report describes XDesc (eXperiment Description), a pilot project that serves as a case study exploring the degree to which an informatics capability developed in a clinical application can be ported for use in the biosciences. In particular, XDesc uses the Entity-Attribute-Value database implementation (including a great deal of metadata-based functionality) developed in TrialDB, a clinical research database, for use in describing the samples used in microarray experiments stored in [...]
Author(s): Shifman, Mark A, Srivastava, Ranjana, Brandt, Cynthia A, Li, Tong-Ruei, White, Kevin, Miller, Perry L
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1458
Care providers' adoption of computer-based health-related documentation ("note capture") tools has been limited, even though such tools have the potential to facilitate information gathering and to promote efficiency of clinical charting. The authors have developed and deployed a computerized note-capture tool that has been made available to end users through a care provider order entry (CPOE) system already in wide use at Vanderbilt. Overall note-capture tool usage between January 1 [...]
Author(s): Rosenbloom, S Trent, Grande, Jonathan, Geissbuhler, Antoine, Miller, Randolph A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1461
This report describes an innovative training program designed to foster entrepreneurship and professionalism in students interested in the field of medical informatics. The course was developed through a private-public interinstitutional collaboration involving four academic institutions, one private firm specializing in health care information management systems, and a philanthropic organization. The program challenged students to serve in multiple roles on multidisciplinary teams and develop an innovative hand-held solution for drug information [...]
Author(s): Carroll, Cathryn A, Rychlewski, Walt, Teat, Marty, Clawson, Darrin
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1463
The aim of this study was to determine whether an automated e-mail messaging system that sent individually timed educational messages (ITEMs) increased the effectiveness of an Internet smoking cessation intervention.
Author(s): Lenert, Leslie, Muñoz, Ricardo F, Perez, John E, Bansod, Aditya
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1464
Health care providers are beginning to deliver a range of Internet-based services to patients; however, it is not clear which of these e-health services patients need or desire. The authors propose that patients' acceptance of provider-delivered e-health can be modeled in advance of application development by measuring the effects of several key antecedents to e-health use and applying models of acceptance developed in the information technology (IT) field.
Author(s): Wilson, E Vance, Lankton, Nancy K
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1475
To describe resources clinicians use when they prescribe antimicrobials, the authors surveyed prescribers by telephone within hours (median 2.9) after they ordered one or more antimicrobials for a patient. Among 157 prescribers, 87 (55%) used one or more external resources to aid in decisions about their order. The other 70 (45%) used only their own knowledge and experience. Fifty-nine (38%) consulted another person. Fifty-four (34%) used a print, computer, or [...]
Author(s): Sellman, Jonathan S, Decarolis, Douglas, Schullo-Feulner, Anne, Nelson, David B, Filice, Gregory A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1493
Automated clinical decision support (CDS) has shown promise in improving safe medication use. The authors performed a trial of CDS, given both during computerized physician order entry (CPOE) and in response to new laboratory results, comparing the time courses of clinician behaviors related to digoxin use before and after implementation of the alerts.
Author(s): Galanter, William L, Polikaitis, Audrius, DiDomenico, Robert J
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1500