Automated tuberculosis detection.
To measure the accuracy of automated tuberculosis case detection.
Author(s): Hripcsak, G, Knirsch, C A, Jain, N L, Pablos-Mendez, A
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040376
To measure the accuracy of automated tuberculosis case detection.
Author(s): Hripcsak, G, Knirsch, C A, Jain, N L, Pablos-Mendez, A
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040376
Errors of omission are a common cause of systems failures. Physicians often fail to order tests or treatments needed to monitor/ameliorate the effects of other tests or treatments. The authors hypothesized that automated, guideline-based reminders to physicians, provided as they wrote orders, could reduce these omissions.
Author(s): Overhage, J M, Tierney, W M, Zhou, X H, McDonald, C J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040364
Data in computer-based patient records (CPRs) have many uses beyond their primary role in patient care, including research and health-system management. Although the accuracy of CPR data directly affects these applications, there has been only sporadic interest in, and no previous review of, data accuracy in CPRs. This paper reviews the published studies of data accuracy in CPRs. These studies report highly variable levels of accuracy. This variability stems from [...]
Author(s): Hogan, W R, Wagner, M M
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040342
Develop the methodological foundation for interactive use of Markov process decision models by patients and physicians at the bedside.
Author(s): Cher, D J, Lenert, L A
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040301
Clinical decision making is driven by information in the form of patient data and clinical knowledge. Currently prevalent systems used to store and retrieve this information have high failure rates, which can be traced to well-established system constraints. The authors use an industrial process model of clinical decision making to expose the role of these constraints in increasing variability in the delivery of relevant clinical knowledge and patient data to [...]
Author(s): Elson, R B, Faughnan, J G, Connelly, D P
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040266
Author(s): Hammond, W E
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040254
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
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:
To examine the issues involved in mapping an existing structured controlled vocabulary, the Medical Entities Dictionary (MED) developed at Columbia University, to an institutional vocabulary, the laboratory and pharmacy vocabularies of the Yale New Haven Medical Center.
Author(s): Kannry, J L, Wright, L, Shifman, M, Silverstein, S, Miller, P L
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1996.96342650