Accuracy of references in five biomedical informatics journals.
To determine the rate and type of errors in biomedical informatics journal article references.
Author(s): Aronsky, Dominik, Ransom, Joel, Robinson, Kevin
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1683
To determine the rate and type of errors in biomedical informatics journal article references.
Author(s): Aronsky, Dominik, Ransom, Joel, Robinson, Kevin
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1683
Consensus is growing that a health care information and communication infrastructure is one key to fixing the crisis in the United States in health care quality, cost, and access. The National Health Information Infrastructure (NHII) is an initiative of the Department of Health and Human Services receiving bipartisan support. There are many possible courses toward its objective. Decision makers need to reflect carefully on which approaches are likely to work [...]
Author(s): Stead, William W, Kelly, Brian J, Kolodner, Robert M
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1685
To model the temporal information contained in medical narrative reports as a simple temporal constraint satisfaction problem.
Author(s): Hripcsak, George, Zhou, Li, Parsons, Simon, Das, Amar K, Johnson, Stephen B
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1623
The Georgetown University Medical Center Department of Radiology used a tailored version of OCTAVE, a self-directed information security risk assessment method, to design a teleradiology system that complied with the regulation implementing the security provisions of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) of 1996. The system addressed threats to and vulnerabilities in the privacy and security of protected health information. By using OCTAVE, Georgetown identified the teleradiology program's [...]
Author(s): Collmann, Jeff, Alaoui, Adil, Nguyen, Dan, Lindisch, David
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1404
In this paper, the authors describe a methodology to transform programmatically structured reporting (SR) templates defined by the Digital Imaging and Communications for Medicine (DICOM) standard into an XML schema representation. Such schemas can be used in the creation and validation of XML-encoded SR documents that use templates. Templates are a means to put additional constraints on an SR document to promote common formats for specific reporting applications or domains [...]
Author(s): Zhao, Luyin, Lee, Kwok Pun, Hu, Jingkun
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1519
The rapid advances in high-throughput biotechnologies such as DNA microarrays and mass spectrometry have generated vast amounts of data ranging from gene expression to proteomics data. The large size and complexity involved in analyzing such data demand a significant amount of computing power. High-performance computation (HPC) is an attractive and increasingly affordable approach to help meet this challenge. There is a spectrum of techniques that can be used to achieve [...]
Author(s): Carriero, Nicholas, Osier, Michael V, Cheung, Kei-Hoi, Miller, Perry L, Gerstein, Mark, Zhao, Hongyu, Wu, Baolin, Rifkin, Scott, Chang, Joseph, Zhang, Heping, White, Kevin, Williams, Kenneth, Schultz, Martin
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1571
The incorporation of genomic data into personal medical records poses many challenges to patient privacy. In response, various systems for preserving patient privacy in shared genomic data have been developed and deployed. Although these systems de-identify the data by removing explicit identifiers (e.g., name, address, or Social Security number) and incorporate sound security design principles, they suffer from a lack of formal modeling of inferences learnable from shared data. This [...]
Author(s): Malin, Bradley A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1603
Despite growing support for the adoption of electronic health records (EHR) to improve U.S. healthcare delivery, EHR adoption in the United States is slow to date due to a fundamental failure of the healthcare information technology marketplace. Reasons for the slow adoption of healthcare information technology include a misalignment of incentives, limited purchasing power among providers, variability in the viability of EHR products and companies, and limited demonstrated value of [...]
Author(s): Middleton, Blackford, Hammond, W Ed, Brennan, Patricia F, Cooper, Gregory F
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1669
Author(s): Gardner, Reed M, Evans, R Scott
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1651
Patient access to their electronic health care record (EHR) and Web-based communication between patients and providers can potentially improve the quality of health care, but little is known about patients' attitudes toward this combined electronic access. The objective of our study was to evaluate patients' values and perceptions regarding Web-based communication with their primary care providers in the context of access to their electronic health care record.
Author(s): Hassol, Andrea, Walker, James M, Kidder, David, Rokita, Kim, Young, David, Pierdon, Steven, Deitz, Deborah, Kuck, Sarah, Ortiz, Eduardo
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M1593