Leveraging a fellowship in medical informatics: focus on software.
Author(s): Buchanan, B G
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.96073837
Author(s): Buchanan, B G
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.96073837
To analyze the temporal aspects of symptoms, including their temporal uncertainty, in order to develop a high-level conceptual data model representation of this domain.
Author(s): Dolin, R H
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.96073835
T systematically locate, register, and abstract information used in comparing effects of various information services (computerized and noncomputerized) and utilization management interventions on the process and outcome of patient care.
Author(s): Balas, E A, Stockham, M G, Mitchell, M A, Austin, S M, West, D A, Ewigman, B G
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.96073833
The Active Digital Library at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center has created and implemented an educational software evaluation process to facilitate the timely recommendation for product acquisition. Using this process, breadth and depth of subject coverage, clarity of presentation, quality of construction, and ease of use are being assessed by content and technical experts. The process uses a team approach, employing a bi-level evaluation instrument based on existing software evaluation [...]
Author(s): Huber, J T, Giuse, N B
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.96073831
Author(s): Barnett, G O
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.96073830
Clinical computing application development at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center has been limited by the lack of a flexible programming environment that supports multiple client user platforms. The World Wide Web offers a potential solution, with its multifunction servers, multiplatform clients, and use of standard protocols for displaying information. The authors are now using the Web, coupled with their own local clinical data server and vocabulary server, to carry out rapid prototype [...]
Author(s): Cimino, J J, Socratous, S A, Clayton, P D
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.96073829
Author(s): Lincoln, T L
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.96010397
Author(s): Grobe, S J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.96010396
This article begins with a summary of the trend toward a person-based health record, and the need to integrate data from a variety of sources to achieve this. A project is described that demonstrated problems with the structure of nursing care plans. These problems affected the ability to integrate care plan data into a clinical database capable of analysis to link control of process with clinical outcome. A second project [...]
Author(s): Hoy, J D, Hyslop, A Q
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.96010395
This article explores the application of normative decision theory (NDT) to the challenge of facilitating and measuring patient satisfaction. Patient satisfaction is the appraisal, by an individual, of the extent to which the care provided has met that individual's expectations and preferences. Classic decision analysis provides a graphic and computational strategy to link patient preferences for outcomes to the treatment choices likely to produce the outcomes. Multiple criteria models enable [...]
Author(s): Brennan, P F
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.96010394