A Patient-Centered Approach to Writing Ambulatory Visit Notes in the Cures Act Era.
Author(s): Lam, Barbara D, Dupee, David, Gerard, Macda, Bell, Sigall K
DOI: 10.1055/s-0043-1761436
Author(s): Lam, Barbara D, Dupee, David, Gerard, Macda, Bell, Sigall K
DOI: 10.1055/s-0043-1761436
Although electronic medication administration records (eMARs) and bar-coded medication administration (BCMA) have improved medication safety, poor usability of these technologies can increase patient safety risks.
Author(s): Pruitt, Zoe M, Kazi, Sadaf, Weir, Charlene, Taft, Teresa, Busog, Deanna-Nicole, Ratwani, Raj, Hettinger, Aaron Z
DOI: 10.1055/s-0043-1761435
The COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) pandemic rapidly expanded telemedicine scale and scope. As telemedicine becomes routine, understanding how specialty and diagnosis combine with demographics to impact telemedicine use will aid in addressing its current limitations.
Author(s): Hsiao, Vivian, Chandereng, Thevaa, Huebner, Jeffrey A, Kunstman, David T, Flood, Grace E, Tevaarwerk, Amye J, Schneider, David F
DOI: 10.1055/s-0043-1762595
Clinical decision support (CDS) has promise for the implementation of antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs) in the emergency department (ED). We sought to assess the usability of a newly developed automated CDS to improve guideline-adherent antibiotic prescribing for pediatric community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) and urinary tract infection (UTI).
Author(s): McGonagle, Erin A, Karavite, Dean J, Grundmeier, Robert W, Schmidt, Sarah K, May, Larissa S, Cohen, Daniel M, Cruz, Andrea T, Tu, Shin-Ping, Bajaj, Lalit, Dayan, Peter S, Mistry, Rakesh D
DOI: 10.1055/s-0042-1760082
To close gaps between research and clinical practice, tools are needed for efficient pragmatic trial recruitment and patient-reported outcome collection. The objective was to assess feasibility and process measures for patient-reported outcome collection in a randomized trial comparing electronic health record (EHR) patient portal questionnaires to telephone interview among adults with epilepsy and anxiety or depression symptoms.
Author(s): Munger Clary, Heidi M, Snively, Beverly M, Topaloglu, Umit, Duncan, Pamela, Kimball, James, Alexander, Halley, Brenes, Gretchen A
DOI: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooac052
One of the increasingly accepted methods to evaluate the privacy of synthetic data is by measuring the risk of membership disclosure. This is a measure of the F1 accuracy that an adversary would correctly ascertain that a target individual from the same population as the real data is in the dataset used to train the generative model, and is commonly estimated using a data partitioning methodology with a 0.5 partitioning [...]
Author(s): El Emam, Khaled, Mosquera, Lucy, Fang, Xi
DOI: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooac083
This article describes the impact of a mobile health app (MatHealth App) on maternal and child health knowledge and practices among women with limited education.
Author(s): Musiimenta, Angella, Tumuhimbise, Wilson, Atukunda, Esther C, Mugaba, Aaron T, Asasira, Justus, Katusiime, Jane, Zender, Raphael, Pinkwart, Niels, Mugyenyi, Godfrey Rwambuka, Haberer, Jessica E
DOI: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooac081
Understanding the current state of real-world Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) applications (apps) will benefit biomedical research and clinical care and facilitate advancement of the standard. This study aimed to provide a preliminary assessment of these apps' clinical, technical, and implementation characteristics.
Author(s): Griffin, Ashley C, He, Lu, Sunjaya, Anthony P, King, Andrew J, Khan, Zubin, Nwadiugwu, Martin, Douthit, Brian, Subbian, Vignesh, Nguyen, Viet, Braunstein, Mark, Jaffe, Charles, Schleyer, Titus
DOI: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooac077
The purpose of this study is to provide an overview of apps to help control the spread of Covid-19 in Germany and rate them according to standardized instruments.
Author(s): Holl, Felix, Flemisch, Fabian, Swoboda, Walter, Schobel, Johannes
DOI: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooac082
COVID-19 accelerated telehealth use to ensure care delivery, but there is limited data on the patient perspective. This study aimed to examine telehealth visit uptake before and during COVID-19 and correlates of patient satisfaction and interest in future telehealth visits.
Author(s): Luna, Paulina, Lee, Megan, Vergara Greeno, Rebeca, DeLucia, Nikki, London, Yollanda, Hoffman, Pamela, Burg, Matthew, Harris, Kristie, Spatz, Erica S, Mena-Hurtado, Carlos, Smolderen, Kim G
DOI: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooac079