User Experience Design for Adoption of Asthma Clinical Decision Support Tools.
Author(s): Gao, Emily, Radparvar, Ilana, Dieu, Holly, Ross, Mindy K
DOI: 10.1055/s-0042-1757292
Author(s): Gao, Emily, Radparvar, Ilana, Dieu, Holly, Ross, Mindy K
DOI: 10.1055/s-0042-1757292
Involving clinician end users in the development process of clinical dashboards is important to ensure that user needs are adequately met prior to releasing the dashboard for use. The challenge with following this approach is that clinician end users can undergo periodic turnover, meaning, the clinicians that played a role in the initial development process may not be the same individuals that use the dashboard in future.
Author(s): Burningham, Zachary, Lagha, Regina Richter, Duford-Hutchinson, Brittany, Callaway-Lane, Carol, Sauer, Brian C, Halwani, Ahmad S, Bell, Jamie, Huynh, Tina, Douglas, Joseph R, Kramer, B Josea
DOI: 10.1055/s-0042-1757553
Timely multidisciplinary communication is crucial to prevent patient harm related to miscommunication of clinical information. Many health care organizations provide secure communications systems; however, clinicians often use unapproved platforms on personal devices to communicate asynchronously.
Author(s): Lynch, Doug, Jedwab, Rebecca M, Foster, Joanne, Planche, Yannick, Whitelaw, Lucy, Shi, Junyi, Rajagopalan, Ashray, Franco, Michael
DOI: 10.1055/s-0042-1757158
A computerized 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) can automatically generate diagnostic statements, which are helpful for clinical purposes. Standardization is required for big data analysis when using ECG data generated by different interpretation algorithms. The common data model (CDM) is a standard schema designed to overcome heterogeneity between medical data. Diagnostic statements usually contain multiple CDM concepts and also include non-essential noise information, which should be removed during CDM conversion. Existing CDM [...]
Author(s): Choi, Sunho, Joo, Hyung Joon, Kim, Yoojoong, Kim, Jong-Ho, Seok, Junhee
DOI: 10.1055/s-0042-1756427
The purpose of this study is to identify combinations of workplace conditions that uniquely differentiate high, medium, and low registered nurse (RN) ratings of appropriateness of patient assignment during daytime intensive care unit (ICU) work shifts.
Author(s): Womack, Dana M, Miech, Edward J, Fox, Nicholas J, Silvey, Linus C, Somerville, Anna M, Eldredge, Deborah H, Steege, Linsey M
DOI: 10.1055/s-0042-1756368
There is a common belief that seniority and gender are associated with clinicians' perceptions of the value of electronic health record (EHR) technology and the propensity for burnout. Insufficient evidence exists on the relationship between these variables.
Author(s): Livaudais, Maria, Deng, Derek, Frederick, Tracy, Grey-Theriot, Francine, Kroth, Philip J
DOI: 10.1055/s-0042-1755372
School-aged children with chronic conditions require care coordination for health needs at school. Access to the student's accurate, real-time medical information is essential for school nurses to maximize their care of students. We aim to analyze school nurse access to medical records in a hospital-based electronic health record (EHR) and the effect on patient outcomes. We hypothesized that EHR access would decrease emergency department (ED) visits and inpatient hospitalizations.
Author(s): Baker, Christina, Loresto, Figaro, Pickett, Kaci, Samay, Sadaf Sara, Gance-Cleveland, Bonnie
DOI: 10.1055/a-1905-3729
Author(s): Chen, You, Adler-Milstein, Julia, Sinsky, Christine A
DOI: 10.1055/a-1892-1437
To utilize metrics from physician action logs to analyze volume, physician efficiency and burden as impacted by telemedicine implementation during the COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) pandemic, and physician characteristics such as gender, years since graduation, and specialty category.
Author(s): Ruan, Elise, Beiser, Moshe, Lu, Vivian, Paul, Soaptarshi, Ni, Jason, Nazar, Nijas, Liu, Jianyou, Kim, Mimi, Epstein, Eric, Keller, Marla, Kitsis, Elizabeth, Tomer, Yaron, Jariwala, Sunit P
DOI: 10.1055/a-1877-2745
This quality improvement project sought to enhance clinical information sharing for interhospital transfers to an inpatient hepatology service comprised of internal medicine resident frontline providers (housestaff) with the specific aims of making housestaff aware of 100% of incoming transfers and providing timely access to clinical summaries.
Author(s): Leven, Emily A, Luo, Yuying, Nguyen, Vinh-Tung, Pourmand, Kamron
DOI: 10.1055/s-0042-1756371