Biosurveillance, classification, and semantic health technologies.
Author(s): Chute, Christopher G
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m2693
Author(s): Chute, Christopher G
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m2693
Transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI), the leading cause of transfusion-related death, is underreported by clinicians. For TRALI research, a clinician-independent, computerized system has been developed to detect patients with acute respiratory distress posttransfusion. A computer system generates an alert when a blood gas result indicated a PaO2:FiO2 ratio below 300, within twelve hours of blood issued from the blood bank for a patient. The system was prospectively compared to conventional [...]
Author(s): Finlay-Morreale, Heather E, Louie, Clifton, Toy, Pearl
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2538
The authors define a DNA biobank as a repository of genetic information correlated with patient medical records. DNA biobanks may assist in the research and identification of genetic factors influencing disease and drug interactions, but may raise ethical issues. How healthcare providers perceive DNA biobanks is unknown.
Author(s): Leiman, David A, Lorenzi, Nancy M, Wyatt, Jeremy C, Doney, Alex S F, Rosenbloom, S Trent
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2571
As health care organizations dramatically increase investment in information technology (IT) and the scope of their IT projects, implementation failures become critical events. Implementation failures cause stress on clinical units, increase risk to patients, and result in massive costs that are often not recoverable. At an estimated 28% success rate, the current level of investment defies management logic. This paper asserts that there are "chasms" in IT implementations that represent [...]
Author(s): Lorenzi, Nancy M, Novak, Laurie L, Weiss, Jacob B, Gadd, Cynthia S, Unertl, Kim M
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2583
The Personalized Health Care Workgroup of the American Health Information Community was formed to determine what is needed to promote standard reporting and incorporation of medical genetic/genomic tests and family health history data in electronic health records. The Workgroup has examined and clarified a range of issues related to this information, including interoperability standards and requirements for confidentiality, privacy, and security, in the course of developing recommendations to facilitate its [...]
Author(s): Glaser, John, Henley, Douglas E, Downing, Gregory, Brinner, Kristin M, ,
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2718
To develop mechanisms to formulate queries over the semantic representation of cancer-related data services available through the cancer Biomedical Informatics Grid (caBIG).
Author(s): Shironoshita, E Patrick, Jean-Mary, Yves R, Bradley, Ray M, Kabuka, Mansur R
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2732
Author(s): Schleyer, Titus
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2752
We conducted a reliability study comparing single data entry (SE) into a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet to entry using the existing forms (EF) feature of the Teleforms software system, in which optical character recognition is used to capture data off of paper forms designed in non-Teleforms software programs. We compared the transcription of data from multiple paper forms from over 100 research participants representing almost 20,000 data entry fields. Error rates [...]
Author(s): Wahi, Monika M, Parks, David V, Skeate, Robert C, Goldin, Steven B
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2381
The Clinical Outcomes Assessment Toolkit (COAT) was created through a collaboration between the University of California, Los Angeles and Brigham and Women's Hospital to address the challenge of gathering, formatting, and abstracting data for clinical outcomes and performance measurement research. COAT provides a framework for the development of information pipelines to transform clinical data from its original structured, semi-structured, and unstructured forms to a standardized format amenable to statistical analysis [...]
Author(s): D'Avolio, Leonard W, Bui, Alex A T
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2550
Author(s): Berner, Eta S
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2581