Correction to: Research data warehouse best practices: catalyzing national data sharing through informatics innovation.
Author(s):
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac207
Author(s):
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac207
Privacy is a concern whenever individual patient health data is exchanged for scientific research. We propose using mixed sum-product networks (MSPNs) as private representations of data and take samples from the network to generate synthetic data that can be shared for subsequent statistical analysis. This anonymization method was evaluated with respect to privacy and information loss.
Author(s): Kroes, Shannon K S, van Leeuwen, Matthijs, Groenwold, Rolf H H, Janssen, Mart P
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac184
Federated learning (FL) allows multiple distributed data holders to collaboratively learn a shared model without data sharing. However, individual health system data are heterogeneous. "Personalized" FL variations have been developed to counter data heterogeneity, but few have been evaluated using real-world healthcare data. The purpose of this study is to investigate the performance of a single-site versus a 3-client federated model using a previously described Coronavirus Disease 19 (COVID-19) diagnostic [...]
Author(s): Peng, Le, Luo, Gaoxiang, Walker, Andrew, Zaiman, Zachary, Jones, Emma K, Gupta, Hemant, Kersten, Kristopher, Burns, John L, Harle, Christopher A, Magoc, Tanja, Shickel, Benjamin, Steenburg, Scott D, Loftus, Tyler, Melton, Genevieve B, Gichoya, Judy Wawira, Sun, Ju, Tignanelli, Christopher J
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac188
The aim of this article is to compare the aims, measures, methods, limitations, and scope of studies that employ vendor-derived and investigator-derived measures of electronic health record (EHR) use, and to assess measure consistency across studies.
Author(s): Rule, Adam, Melnick, Edward R, Apathy, Nate C
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac177
Clinical decision support (CDS) alerts may improve health care quality but "alert fatigue" can reduce provider responsiveness. We analyzed how the introduction of competing alerts affected provider adherence to a single depression screening alert.
Author(s): Murad, Douglas A, Tsugawa, Yusuke, Elashoff, David A, Baldwin, Kevin M, Bell, Douglas S
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac191
Author(s): Alper, Brian S
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac193
Thoughtful integration of interruptive clinical decision support (CDS) alerts within the electronic health record is essential to guide clinicians on the application of pharmacogenomic results at point of care. St. Jude Children's Research Hospital implemented a preemptive pharmacogenomic testing program in 2011 in a multidisciplinary effort involving extensive education to clinicians about pharmacogenomic implications. We conducted a retrospective analysis of clinicians' adherence to 4783 pharmacogenomically guided CDS alerts that triggered [...]
Author(s): Nguyen, Jenny Q, Crews, Kristine R, Moore, Ben T, Kornegay, Nancy M, Baker, Donald K, Hasan, Murad, Campbell, Patrick K, Dean, Shannon M, Relling, Mary V, Hoffman, James M, Haidar, Cyrine E
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac187
Author(s):
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac183
COVID-19 vaccination uptake has been suboptimal, even in high-risk populations. New approaches are needed to bring vaccination data to the groups leading outreach efforts. This article describes work to make state-level vaccination data more accessible by extending the Bulk Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resource (FHIR) standard to better support the repeated retrieval of vaccination data for coordinated outreach efforts. We also describe a corresponding low-foot-print software for population outreach that automates [...]
Author(s): Lenert, Leslie, Jacobs, Jeff, Agnew, James, Ding, Wei, Kirchoff, Katie, Weatherston, Duncan, Deans, Kenneth
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac237
Establish a baseline of informatics professionals' perspectives on climate change and health.
Author(s): Sarabu, Chethan, Deonarine, Andrew, Leitner, Stefano, Fayanju, Oluseyi, Fisun, Myroslava, Nadeau, Kari
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac199