Health information technology and physician-patient interactions: impact of computers on communication during outpatient primary care visits.
Author(s): Heidt, Elizabeth L
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1999
Author(s): Heidt, Elizabeth L
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1999
Laypersons ("consumers") often have difficulty finding, understanding, and acting on health information due to gaps in their domain knowledge. Ideally, consumer health vocabularies (CHVs) would reflect the different ways consumers express and think about health topics, helping to bridge this vocabulary gap. However, despite the recent research on mismatches between consumer and professional language (e.g., lexical, semantic, and explanatory), there have been few systematic efforts to develop and evaluate CHVs [...]
Author(s): Zeng, Qing T, Tse, Tony
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1761
The Public Health Information Network (PHIN) Preparedness initiative strives to implement, on an accelerated pace, a consistent national network of information systems that will support public health in being prepared for public health emergencies. Using the principles and practices of the broader PHIN initiative, PHIN Preparedness concentrates in the short term on ensuring that all public health jurisdictions have, or have access to, systems to accomplish known preparedness functions. The [...]
Author(s): Loonsk, John W, McGarvey, Sunanda R, Conn, Laura A, Johnson, Jennifer
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1815
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
The use of icons and other graphical components in user interfaces has become nearly ubiquitous. The interpretation of such icons is based on the assumption that different users perceive the shapes similarly. At the most basic level, different users must agree on which shapes are similar and which are different. If this similarity can be measured, it may be usable as the basis to design better icons.
Author(s): Payne, Philip R O, Starren, Justin B
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1628
Biomedical databases summarize current scientific knowledge, but they generally require years of laborious curation effort to build, focusing on identifying pertinent literature and data in the voluminous biomedical literature. It is difficult to manually extract useful information embedded in the large volumes of literature, and automated intelligent text analysis tools are becoming increasingly essential to assist in these curation activities. The goal of the authors was to develop an automated [...]
Author(s): Rubin, Daniel L, Thorn, Caroline F, Klein, Teri E, Altman, Russ B
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1640
OBJECTIVE Finding the best scientific evidence that applies to a patient problem is becoming exceedingly difficult due to the exponential growth of medical publications. The objective of this study was to apply machine learning techniques to automatically identify high-quality, content-specific articles for one time period in internal medicine and compare their performance with previous Boolean-based PubMed clinical query filters of Haynes et al. DESIGN The selection criteria of the ACP [...]
Author(s): Aphinyanaphongs, Yindalon, Tsamardinos, Ioannis, Statnikov, Alexander, Hardin, Douglas, Aliferis, Constantin F
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1641
The authors describe a client-server approach to three-dimensional (3-D) visualization of neuroimaging data, which enables researchers to visualize, manipulate, and analyze large brain imaging datasets over the Internet. All computationally intensive tasks are done by a graphics server that loads and processes image volumes and 3-D models, renders 3-D scenes, and sends the renderings back to the client. The authors discuss the system architecture and implementation and give several examples [...]
Author(s): Poliakov, Andrew V, Albright, Evan, Hinshaw, Kevin P, Corina, David P, Ojemann, George, Martin, Richard F, Brinkley, James F
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1671
The Secretary of Health and Human Services recently released a report calling for the nation to create a national health information network (NHIN) that would interconnect Regional Health Information Organizations (RHIOs). These RHIOs, which others have called Local or Regional Health Information Infrastructures (LHII), would in turn interconnect local as well as national health information resources. Little data exist about the activities taking place in communities to create LHIIs.
Author(s): Overhage, J Marc, Evans, Lori, Marchibroda, Janet
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1680