Erratum to: Synthea: An approach, method, and software mechanism for generating synthetic patients and the synthetic electronic health care record.
Author(s):
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocx147
Author(s):
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocx147
Author(s):
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocx113
While the electronic health record (EHR) has become a standard of care, pediatric patients pose a unique set of risks in adult-oriented systems. We describe medication safety and implementation challenges and solutions in the pediatric population of a large academic center transitioning its EHR to Epic.
Author(s): Whalen, Kimberly, Lynch, Emily, Moawad, Iman, John, Tanya, Lozowski, Denise, Cummings, Brian M
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy034
To evaluate the effect of a previously validated electronic health record-based child abuse trigger system on physician compliance with clinical guidelines for evaluation of physical abuse.
Author(s): Suresh, Srinivasan, Saladino, Richard A, Fromkin, Janet, Heineman, Emily, McGinn, Tom, Richichi, Rudolph, Berger, Rachel P
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy025
In recent years, electronic health record systems have been widely implemented in China, making clinical data available electronically. However, little effort has been devoted to making drug information exchangeable among these systems. This study aimed to build a Normalized Chinese Clinical Drug (NCCD) knowledge base, by applying and extending the information model of RxNorm to Chinese clinical drugs.
Author(s): Wang, Li, Zhang, Yaoyun, Jiang, Min, Wang, Jingqi, Dong, Jiancheng, Liu, Yun, Tao, Cui, Jiang, Guoqian, Zhou, Yi, Xu, Hua
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy020
Medical word sense disambiguation (WSD) is challenging and often requires significant training with data labeled by domain experts. This work aims to develop an interactive learning algorithm that makes efficient use of expert's domain knowledge in building high-quality medical WSD models with minimal human effort.
Author(s): Wang, Yue, Zheng, Kai, Xu, Hua, Mei, Qiaozhu
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy013
This paper describes the unified LOINC/RSNA Radiology Playbook and the process by which it was produced.
Author(s): Vreeman, Daniel J, Abhyankar, Swapna, Wang, Kenneth C, Carr, Christopher, Collins, Beverly, Rubin, Daniel L, Langlotz, Curtis P
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocy053
Electronic pharmacovigilance reporting systems are being implemented in many developing countries in an effort to improve reporting rates. This study sought to establish the factors that acted as barriers to the success of an electronic pharmacovigilance reporting system in Kenya 3 years after its implementation.
Author(s): Agoro, Oscar O, Kibira, Sarah W, Freeman, Jenny V, Fraser, Hamish S F
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocx102
We assessed changes in the percentage of providers with positive perceptions of electronic health record (EHR) benefit before and after transition from a local basic to a commercial comprehensive EHR.
Author(s): Krousel-Wood, Marie, McCoy, Allison B, Ahia, Chad, Holt, Elizabeth W, Trapani, Donnalee N, Luo, Qingyang, Price-Haywood, Eboni G, Thomas, Eric J, Sittig, Dean F, Milani, Richard V
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocx094
To reduce the risk of wrong-patient errors, safety experts recommend allowing only one patient chart to be open at a time. Due to the lack of empirical evidence, the number of allowable open charts is often based on anecdotal evidence or institutional preference, and hence varies across institutions. Using an interrupted time series analysis of intercepted wrong-patient medication orders in an emergency department during 2010-2016 (83.6 intercepted wrong-patient events per [...]
Author(s): Kannampallil, Thomas G, Manning, John D, Chestek, David W, Adelman, Jason, Salmasian, Hojjat, Lambert, Bruce L, Galanter, William L
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocx099