CPOE: sufficient, but not perfect, evidence for taking action.
Author(s): Brennan, Patricia Flatley
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m2303
Author(s): Brennan, Patricia Flatley
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m2303
To evaluate the data quality of ventilator settings recorded by respiratory therapists using a computer charting application and assess the impact of incorrect data on computerized ventilator management protocols. DESIGN An analysis of 29,054 charting events gathered over 12 months from 678 ventilated patients (1,736 ventilator days) in four intensive care units at a tertiary care hospital.
Author(s): Vawdrey, David K, Gardner, Reed M, Evans, R Scott, Orme, James F, Clemmer, Terry P, Greenway, Loren, Drews, Frank A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2219
Contemporary error research suggests that the quest to eradicate error is misguided. Error commission, detection, and recovery are an integral part of cognitive work, even at the expert level. In collaborative workspaces, the perception of potential error is directly observable: workers discuss and respond to perceived violations of accepted practice norms. As perceived violations are captured and corrected preemptively, they do not fit Reason's widely accepted definition of error as [...]
Author(s): Cohen, Trevor, Blatter, Brett, Almeida, Carlos, Patel, Vimla L
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2245
Few instruments are available to measure the performance of intensive care unit (ICU) clinical information systems. Our objectives were: 1) to develop a survey-based metric that assesses the automation and usability of an ICU's clinical information system; 2) to determine whether higher scores on this instrument correlate with improved outcomes in a multi-institution quality improvement collaborative.
Author(s): Amarasingham, Ruben, Pronovost, Peter J, Diener-West, Marie, Goeschel, Christine, Dorman, Todd, Thiemann, David R, Powe, Neil R
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2262
Negation is common in clinical documents and is an important source of poor precision in automated indexing systems. Previous research has shown that negated terms may be difficult to identify if the words implying negations (negation signals) are more than a few words away from them. We describe a novel hybrid approach, combining regular expression matching with grammatical parsing, to address the above limitation in automatically detecting negations in clinical [...]
Author(s): Huang, Yang, Lowe, Henry J
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2284
Although demand for information about the effectiveness and efficiency of health care information technology grows, large-scale resource-intensive randomized controlled trials of health care information technology remain impractical. New methods are needed to translate more commonly available clinical process measures into potential impact on clinical outcomes.
Author(s): Kendrick, David C, Bu, Davis, Pan, Eric, Middleton, Blackford
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2327
Study comparatively (1) concept-based search, using documents pre-indexed by a conceptual hierarchy; (2) context-sensitive search, using structured, labeled documents; and (3) traditional full-text search. Hypotheses were: (1) more contexts lead to better retrieval accuracy; and (2) adding concept-based search to the other searches would improve upon their baseline performances.
Author(s): Moskovitch, Robert, Martins, Susana B, Behiri, Eytan, Weiss, Aviram, Shahar, Yuval
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1953
Developments in information technology offer new opportunities to design electronic patient record systems (EPR) which integrate a broad range of functions such as clinical decision support, order entry, or electronic alerts. It has been recently suggested that EPR could support new applications for disease surveillance and patient safety. We describe the integration of a voluntary incident reporting system into an EPR used in operating theatres, to allow the reporting of [...]
Author(s): Haller, Guy, Myles, Paul S, Stoelwinder, Johannes, Langley, Mark, Anderson, Hugh, McNeil, John
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2196
There are limited data regarding implementing electronic health records (EHR) in underserved settings. We evaluated the implementation of an EHR within the Indian Health Service (IHS), a federally funded health system for Native Americans.
Author(s): Sequist, Thomas D, Cullen, Theresa, Hays, Howard, Taualii, Maile M, Simon, Steven R, Bates, David W
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2234
To understand information systems components important in supporting team-based care of chronic illness through a literature search.
Author(s): Dorr, David, Bonner, Laura M, Cohen, Amy N, Shoai, Rebecca S, Perrin, Ruth, Chaney, Edmund, Young, Alexander S
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2255