Using computer technology to detect, measure, and prevent adverse drug events.
Author(s): Gardner, Reed M, Evans, R Scott
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1651
Author(s): Gardner, Reed M, Evans, R Scott
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1651
To examine various strategies for the identification of adverse drug events (ADEs) among older persons in the ambulatory clinical setting.
Author(s): Field, Terry S, Gurwitz, Jerry H, Harrold, Leslie R, Rothschild, Jeffrey M, Debellis, Kristin, Seger, Andrew C, Fish, Leslie S, Garber, Lawrence, Kelleher, Michael, Bates, David W
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1586
The aim of this study was to determine characteristics of drug allergy alert overrides, assess how often they lead to preventable adverse drug events (ADEs), and suggest methods for improving the allergy-alerting system.
Author(s): Hsieh, Tyken C, Kuperman, Gilad J, Jaggi, Tonushree, Hojnowski-Diaz, Patricia, Fiskio, Julie, Williams, Deborah H, Bates, David W, Gandhi, Tejal K
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1556
Cellular radio telecommunication has increased exponentially with many applications to health care reported. The authors attempt to summarize published applications with demonstrated effect on health care, review briefly the rapid evolution of hardware and software standards, explain current limitations and future potential of data quality and security, and discuss issues of safety.
Author(s): Sneiderman, Charles A, Ackerman, Michael J
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1532
The purpose of this proof-of-concept study was to assess the feasibility of using a generic health measure to create coded functional status indicators and compare the characterization of a stroke population using coded functional indicators and using health-related quality-of-life summary measures alone.
Author(s): Mayo, Nancy E, Poissant, Lise, Ahmed, Sara, Finch, Lois, Higgins, Johanne, Salbach, Nancy M, Soicher, Judith, Jaglal, Susan
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1462
To survey a cross section of patients presenting to three urban primary care clinics to understand online health information search behaviors.
Author(s): Dickerson, Suzanne, Reinhart, Amber M, Feeley, Thomas Hugh, Bidani, Rakesh, Rich, Ellen, Garg, Vinod K, Hershey, Charles O
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1460
Author(s): Sands, Daniel Z
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1576
The aim of this study was to evaluate the experiences of patients and physicians in a clinical trial of an online electronic medical record (SPPARO, System Providing Patients Access to Records Online).
Author(s): Earnest, Mark A, Ross, Stephen E, Wittevrongel, Loretta, Moore, Laurie A, Lin, Chen-Tan
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1479
The Medical Informatics Network Tool (MINT) is a software system that supports the management of care for chronic illness. It is designed to improve clinical information, facilitate teamwork, and allow management of health care quality. MINT includes a browser interface for entry and organization of data and preparation of real-time reports. It includes personal computer-based applications that interact with clinicians. MINT is being used in a project to improve the [...]
Author(s): Young, Alexander S, Mintz, Jim, Cohen, Amy N, Chinman, Matthew J
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1492
In highly functional metadata-driven software, the interrelationships within the metadata become complex, and maintenance becomes challenging. We describe an approach to metadata management that uses a knowledge-base subschema to store centralized information about metadata dependencies and use cases involving specific types of metadata modification. Our system borrows ideas from production-rule systems in that some of this information is a high-level specification that is interpreted and executed dynamically by a middleware [...]
Author(s): Brandt, Cynthia A, Gadagkar, Rohit, Rodriguez, Cesar, Nadkarni, Prakash M
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1511