Authorship issues related to software tools.
Author(s): Miller, Randolph A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m2305
Author(s): Miller, Randolph A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m2305
To assess the impact of the electronic health record (EHR) on cost (i.e., payments to providers) and process measures of quality of care.
Author(s): Welch, W Pete, Bazarko, Dawn, Ritten, Kimberly, Burgess, Yo, Harmon, Robert, Sandy, Lewis G
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2125
This study evaluated a computerized method for extracting numeric clinical measurements related to diabetes care from free text in electronic patient records (EPR) of general practitioners.
Author(s): Voorham, Jaco, Denig, Petra
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2128
The current mechanism for monitoring toxicity symptoms in cancer trials depends on a complex paper-based process. Electronic collection of patient-reported outcomes (PROs) may be more efficient and accurate. An online PRO platform was created including a simple data entry interface, real-time report generation, and an alert system to e-mail clinicians when patients self-report serious toxicities. Feasibility assessment involving 180 chemotherapy patients demonstrated high levels of use at up to 40 [...]
Author(s): Basch, Ethan, Artz, David, Iasonos, Alexia, Speakman, John, Shannon, Kevin, Lin, Kai, Pun, Charmaine, Yong, Henry, Fearn, Paul, Barz, Allison, Scher, Howard I, McCabe, Mary, Schrag, Deborah
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2177
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
The goal of this research is to learn how the editorial staffs of bioinformatics and medical informatics journals provide support for cross-community exposure. Models such as co-citation and co-author analysis measure the relationships between researchers; but they do not capture how environments that support knowledge transfer across communities are organized.
Author(s): Malin, Bradley, Carley, Kathleen
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2228
This article describes the algorithms implemented in the Essie search engine that is currently serving several Web sites at the National Library of Medicine. Essie is a phrase-based search engine with term and concept query expansion and probabilistic relevancy ranking. Essie's design is motivated by an observation that query terms are often conceptually related to terms in a document, without actually occurring in the document text. Essie's performance was evaluated [...]
Author(s): Ide, Nicholas C, Loane, Russell F, Demner-Fushman, Dina
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2233
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
The full impact of IT in health care has not been realized because of the failure to recognize that (1) the path from availability of applications to the anticipated benefits passes through a series of steps; and (2) progress can be stopped at any one of those steps. As a result, strategies for diffusion, adoption, and use have been incomplete and have produced disappointing results. In this paper, we present [...]
Author(s): Davidson, Stephen M, Heineke, Janelle
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2254
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