Toward diversity, equity, and inclusion in informatics, health care, and society.
Author(s): Bakken, Suzanne
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa265
Author(s): Bakken, Suzanne
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa265
Reducing risk of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection among healthcare personnel requires a robust occupational health response involving multiple disciplines. We describe a flexible informatics solution to enable such coordination, and we make it available as open-source software.
Author(s): Fillmore, Nathanael R, Elbers, Danne C, La, Jennifer, Feldman, Theodore C, Sung, Feng-Chi, Hall, Robert B, Nguyen, Vinh, Link, Nicholas, Zwolinski, Robert, Dipietro, Svitlana, Miller, Steven J, Aleksanyan, Anahit, Goryachev, Sergey D, Corcoran, Paul, Bergstrom, Steven J, Parenteau, Michael A, Sprague, Robert S, Thornton, David J, Driver, Jane A, Strymish, Judith M, Evans, Stewart, Colonna, Benjamin, Brophy, Mary T, Do, Nhan V
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa162
Biomedical informatics attracts few underrepresented racial minorities (URMs) into PhD programs. We examine graduation trends from 2002 to 2017 to determine how URM representation has changed over time. We also examine academic job placements by race and identify individual and institutional characteristics associated with URM graduates being successfully placed in academic jobs.
Author(s): Wiley, Kevin, Dixon, Brian E, Grannis, Shaun J, Menachemi, Nir
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa206
Author(s): Holmgren, A Jay, Apathy, Nate C, Adler-Milstein, Julia
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa192
People with long-term conditions require serial clinical assessments. Digital patient-reported symptoms collected between visits can inform these, especially if integrated into electronic health records (EHRs) and clinical workflows. This systematic review identified and summarized EHR-integrated systems to remotely collect patient-reported symptoms and examined their anticipated and realized benefits in long-term conditions.
Author(s): Gandrup, Julie, Ali, Syed Mustafa, McBeth, John, van der Veer, Sabine N, Dixon, William G
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa177
In the wake of COVID-19, clinicians took to telehealth to continue providing services to their patients, mostly via telephone or videoconferencing technology. Telehealth has many promised and proven benefits including convenience to the patient, potentially less distraction from the electronic health record (EHR), saves in travel time and expenses, and lowering patients' wait time in the clinic. However, there could be some unintended negative consequences including increased clinician burnout due [...]
Author(s): Shachak, Aviv, Alkureishi, Maria Alcocer
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa185
Building Uplifted Families (BUF) is a cross-sector community initiative to improve health and economic disparities in Charlotte, North Carolina. A formative evaluation strategy was used to support iterative process improvement and collaborative engagement of cross-sector partners. To address challenges with electronic data collection through REDCap Cloud, we developed the BUF Rapid Dissemination (BUF-RD) model, a multistage data governance system supplemented by open-source technologies, such as: Stage 1) data collection; Stage [...]
Author(s): Mayfield, Carlene A, Gigler, Margaret E, Snapper, Leslie, Jose, Jainmary, Tynan, Jackie, Scott, Victoria C, Dulin, Michael
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa181
Systematic reviews are important in health care but are expensive to produce and maintain. The authors explore the use of automated transformations of Boolean queries to improve the identification of relevant studies for updates to systematic reviews.
Author(s): Alharbi, Amal, Stevenson, Mark
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa148
Author(s): Vilendrer, Stacie, Patel, Birju, Chadwick, Whitney, Hwa, Michael, Asch, Steven, Pageler, Natalie, Ramdeo, Rajiv, Saliba-Gustafsson, Erika A, Strong, Philip, Sharp, Christopher
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa182
This study evaluates and characterizes the use of a confidential clinic note type as part of the implementation of open notes at a free-standing children's hospital. We describe how this electronic health record feature which disables patient and family access to selected notes in the patient portal is used across our institution, which clinicians are using this feature, and the type of data our clinicians consider confidential.
Author(s): Parsons, Chase R, Hron, Jonathan D, Bourgeois, Fabienne C
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa202