Advancing biomedical and health informatics knowledge through reviews of existing research.
Author(s): Bakken, Suzanne
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocz016
Author(s): Bakken, Suzanne
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocz016
Health information technology (HIT) interventions include electronic patient records, prescribing, and ordering systems. Clinical pathways are multidisciplinary plans of care that enable the delivery of evidence-based healthcare. Our objective was to systematically review the effects of implementing HIT-supported clinical pathways.
Author(s): Neame, Matthew T, Chacko, Jerry, Surace, Anna E, Sinha, Ian P, Hawcutt, Daniel B
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy176
Existing approaches to managing genetic and genomic test results from external laboratories typically include filing of text reports within the electronic health record, making them unavailable in many cases for clinical decision support. Even when structured computable results are available, the lack of adopted standards requires considerations for processing the results into actionable knowledge, in addition to storage and management of the data. Here, we describe the design and implementation [...]
Author(s): Rasmussen, Luke V, Smith, Maureen E, Almaraz, Federico, Persell, Stephen D, Rasmussen-Torvik, Laura J, Pacheco, Jennifer A, Chisholm, Rex L, Christensen, Carl, Herr, Timothy M, Wehbe, Firas H, Starren, Justin B
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy187
The study sought to review recent literature regarding use of speech recognition (SR) technology for clinical documentation and to understand the impact of SR on document accuracy, provider efficiency, institutional cost, and more.
Author(s): Blackley, Suzanne V, Huynh, Jessica, Wang, Liqin, Korach, Zfania, Zhou, Li
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy179
Cohort definition is a bottleneck for conducting clinical research and depends on subjective decisions by domain experts. Data-driven cohort definition is appealing but requires substantial knowledge of terminologies and clinical data models. Criteria2Query is a natural language interface that facilitates human-computer collaboration for cohort definition and execution using clinical databases.
Author(s): Yuan, Chi, Ryan, Patrick B, Ta, Casey, Guo, Yixuan, Li, Ziran, Hardin, Jill, Makadia, Rupa, Jin, Peng, Shang, Ning, Kang, Tian, Weng, Chunhua
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy178
Natural language processing (NLP) of symptoms from electronic health records (EHRs) could contribute to the advancement of symptom science. We aim to synthesize the literature on the use of NLP to process or analyze symptom information documented in EHR free-text narratives.
Author(s): Koleck, Theresa A, Dreisbach, Caitlin, Bourne, Philip E, Bakken, Suzanne
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy173
Clinical research data warehouses are largely populated from information extracted from electronic health records (EHRs). While these data provide information about a patient's medications, laboratory results, diagnoses, and history, her social, economic, and environmental determinants of health are also major contributing factors in readmission, morbidity, and mortality and are often absent or unstructured in the EHR. Details about a patient's socioeconomic status may be found in the U.S. census. To [...]
Author(s): Gardner, Bret J, Pedersen, Jay G, Campbell, Mary E, McClay, James C
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy172
Social media use has become ubiquitous in the United States, providing unprecedented opportunities for research. However, the rapidly evolving research landscape has far outpaced federal regulations for the protection of human subjects. Recent highly publicized scandals have raised legitimate concerns in the media about how social media data are being used. These circumstances combined with the absence of ethical standards puts even the best intentioned scientists at risk of possible [...]
Author(s): Pagoto, Sherry, Nebeker, Camille
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy174
Effective communication is critical to the safe delivery of care but is characterized by outdated technologies. Mobile technology has the potential to transform communication and teamwork but the evidence is currently uncertain. The objective of this systematic review was to summarize the quality and breadth of evidence for the impact of mobile technologies on communication and teamwork in hospitals.
Author(s): Martin, Guy, Khajuria, Ankur, Arora, Sonal, King, Dominic, Ashrafian, Hutan, Darzi, Ara
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy175
Data modeling for electronic health records (EHRs) is complex, requiring technological and cognitive sophistication. The openEHR approach leverages the tacit knowledge of domain experts made explicit in a model development process aiming at interoperability and data reuse.
Author(s): Wei, Ping-Cheng, Atalag, Koray, Day, Karen
DOI: 10.1055/s-0039-1681074