Correction: A bias evaluation checklist for predictive models and its pilot application for 30-day hospital readmission models.
Author(s):
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac102
Author(s):
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac102
Participation in healthcare research shapes health policy and practice; however, low trust is a barrier to participation. We evaluated whether returning health information (information transparency) and disclosing intent of data use (intent transparency) impacts trust in research.
Author(s): Mangal, Sabrina, Park, Leslie, Reading Turchioe, Meghan, Choi, Jacky, Niño de Rivera, Stephanie, Myers, Annie, Goyal, Parag, Dugdale, Lydia, Masterson Creber, Ruth
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac084
Methods to correct class imbalance (imbalance between the frequency of outcome events and nonevents) are receiving increasing interest for developing prediction models. We examined the effect of imbalance correction on the performance of logistic regression models.
Author(s): van den Goorbergh, Ruben, van Smeden, Maarten, Timmerman, Dirk, Van Calster, Ben
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac093
The Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics-Underserved Populations (RADx-UP) program is a consortium of community-engaged research projects with the goal of increasing access to Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) tests in underserved populations. To accelerate clinical research, common data elements (CDEs) were selected and refined to standardize data collection and enhance cross-consortium analysis.
Author(s): Carrillo, Gabriel A, Cohen-Wolkowiez, Michael, D'Agostino, Emily M, Marsolo, Keith, Wruck, Lisa M, Johnson, Laura, Topping, James, Richmond, Al, Corbie, Giselle, Kibbe, Warren A
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac097
Hospitals have multiple methods available to engage in health information exchange (HIE); however, it is not well understood whether these methods are complements or substitutes. We sought to characterize patterns of adoption of HIE methods and examine the association between these methods and increased availability and use of patient information.
Author(s): Everson, Jordan, Patel, Vaishali
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac079
This case study assesses the uptake, user characteristics, and outcomes of automated self-scheduling in a community-based physician group affiliated with an academic health system. We analyzed 1 995 909 appointments booked between January 1, 2019, and June 30, 2021 at more than 30 practice sites. Over the study period, uptake of self-scheduling increased from 4% to 15% of kept appointments. Younger, commercially insured patients were more likely to be users. Missed appointments [...]
Author(s): Woodcock, Elizabeth, Sen, Aditi, Weiner, Jonathan
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac087
HL7 SMART on FHIR apps have the potential to improve healthcare delivery and EHR usability, but providers must be aware of the apps and use them for these potential benefits to be realized. The HL7 CDS Hooks standard was developed in part for this purpose. The objective of this study was to determine if contextually relevant CDS Hooks prompts can increase utilization of a SMART on FHIR medical reference app [...]
Author(s): Morgan, Keaton L, Kukhareva, Polina V, Warner, Phillip B, Wilkof, Jonah, Snyder, Meir, Horton, Devin, Madsen, Troy, Habboushe, Joseph, Kawamoto, Kensaku
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac085
Deep learning models for clinical event forecasting (CEF) based on a patient's medical history have improved significantly over the past decade. However, their transition into practice has been limited, particularly for diseases with very low prevalence. In this paper, we introduce CEF-CL, a novel method based on contrastive learning to forecast in the face of a limited number of positive training instances.
Author(s): Zhang, Ziqi, Yan, Chao, Zhang, Xinmeng, Nyemba, Steve L, Malin, Bradley A
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac086
Artificial intelligence/machine learning models are being rapidly developed and used in clinical practice. However, many models are deployed without a clear understanding of clinical or operational impact and frequently lack monitoring plans that can detect potential safety signals. There is a lack of consensus in establishing governance to deploy, pilot, and monitor algorithms within operational healthcare delivery workflows. Here, we describe a governance framework that combines current regulatory best practices [...]
Author(s): Bedoya, Armando D, Economou-Zavlanos, Nicoleta J, Goldstein, Benjamin A, Young, Allison, Jelovsek, J Eric, O'Brien, Cara, Parrish, Amanda B, Elengold, Scott, Lytle, Kay, Balu, Suresh, Huang, Erich, Poon, Eric G, Pencina, Michael J
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac078
We investigated how the electronic health records (EHRs) strategies concerning EHR sourcing and vendor switching impact user satisfaction over time.
Author(s): Srivastava, Ankita, Ayyalasomayajula, Surya, Bao, Chenzhang, Ayabakan, Sezgin, Delen, Dursun
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocac082