Computer-based diagnostic support systems.
Author(s): Hay, W H
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.0040256
Author(s): Hay, W H
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.0040256
Author(s): Hammond, W E
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040254
Author(s): Kulikowski, C A
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.0040252
To compare three potential sources of controlled clinical terminology (READ codes version 3.1, SNOMED International, and Unified Medical Language System (UMLS) version 1.6) relative to attributes of completeness, clinical taxonomy, administrative mapping, term definitions and clarity (duplicate coding rate).
Author(s): Campbell, J R, Carpenter, P, Sneiderman, C, Cohn, S, Chute, C G, Warren, J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040238
We evaluate the ability of a microcomputer program (Automatch) to link patient records in our hospital's database (N = 253,836) with mortality files from California (N = 1,312,779) and the U.S. Social Security Administration (N = 13,341,581). We linked 96.5% of 3,448 in-hospital deaths, 99.3% for patients with social security numbers. None of 14,073 patients known to be alive (because they were subsequently admitted) was linked with California deaths, and [...]
Author(s): Newman, T B, Brown, A N
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040233
Our premise is that from the perspective of maximum flexibility of data usage by computer-based record (CPR) systems, existing nursing classification systems are necessary, but not sufficient, for representing important aspects of "what nurses do." In particular, we have focused our attention on those classification systems that represent nurses' clinical activities through the abstraction of activities into categories of nursing interventions. In this theoretical paper, we argue that taxonomic, combinatorial [...]
Author(s): Henry, S B, Mead, C N
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040222
Institutions all want electronic medical record (EMR) systems. They want them to solve their record movement problems, to improve the quality and coherence of the care process, to automate guidelines and care pathways to assist clinical research, outcomes management, and process improvement. EMRs are very difficult to construct because the existing electronic data sources, e.g., laboratory systems, pharmacy systems, and physician dictation systems, reside on many isolated islands with differing [...]
Author(s): McDonald, C J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040213
Telemedicine is being used by physicians at the member hospitals of the Jefferson Cancer Network (JCN) for consultations regarding the diagnosis and management of cancer patients. The technology employed for this telemedicine system was chosen to meet three related specifications: low capital and operating cost, internal maintainability by community hospital data processing staffs, and compatibility with the existing technologic infrastructure. The solution selected is the ubiquitous desktop personal computer and [...]
Author(s): London, J W, Morton, D E, Marinucci, D, Catalano, R, Comis, R L
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040018
Information contained in medical images differs considerably from that residing in alphanumeric format. The difference can be attributed to four characteristics: (1) the semantics of medical knowledge extractable from images is imprecise; (2) image information contains form and spatial data, which are not expressible in conventional language; (3) a large part of image information is geometric; (4) diagnostic inferences derived from images rest on an incomplete, continuously evolving model of [...]
Author(s): Tagare, H D, Jaffe, C C, Duncan, J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040184
Author(s): Beck, J. Robert
DOI: