Telehealth: the need for evaluation redux.
Author(s): Hersh, William R, Patterson, Patricia K, Kraemer, Dale F
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2002.0090089
Author(s): Hersh, William R, Patterson, Patricia K, Kraemer, Dale F
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2002.0090089
The purpose of the study was to evaluate the uses of handheld computers (also called personal digital assistants, or PDAs) in family practice residency programs in the United States.
Author(s): Criswell, Dan F, Parchman, Michael L
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2002.0090080
Supplement 23 to DICOM (Digital Imaging and Communications for Medicine), Structured Reporting, is a specification that supports a semantically rich representation of image and waveform content, enabling experts to share image and related patient information. DICOM SR supports the representation of textual and coded data linked to images and waveforms. Nevertheless, the medical information technology community needs models that work as bridges between the DICOM relational model and open object-oriented [...]
Author(s): Tirado-Ramos, Alfredo, Hu, Jingkun, Lee, K P
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2002.0090063
The application of XML (Extensible Markup Language) is still costly. The authors present an approach to ease the development of XML applications. They have developed a Web-based framework that combines existing XML resources into a comprehensive XML application. The XML framework is model-driven, i.e., the authors primarily design XML document models (XML schema, document type definition), and users can enter, search, and view related XML documents using a Web browser [...]
Author(s): Schweiger, Ralf, Hoelzer, Simon, Altmann, Udo, Rieger, Joerg, Dudeck, Joachim
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2002.0090037
The benefits of computerized physician order entry have been widely recognized, although few institutions have successfully installed these systems. Obstacles to successful implementation are organizational as well as technical. In the spring of 2000, following a 4-year period of planning and customization, a 9-month pilot project, and a 14-month hiatus for year 2000, the Ohio State University Health System extensively implemented physician order entry across inpatient units. Implementation for specialty [...]
Author(s): Ahmad, Asif, Teater, Phyllis, Bentley, Thomas D, Kuehn, Lynn, Kumar, Rajee R, Thomas, Andrew, Mekhjian, Hagop S
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2002.0090016
Medical informatics systems are often designed to perform at the level of human experts. Evaluation of the performance of these systems is often constrained by lack of reference standards, either because the appropriate response is not known or because no simple appropriate response exists. Even when performance can be assessed, it is not always clear whether the performance is sufficient or reasonable. These challenges can be addressed if an evaluator [...]
Author(s): Hripcsak, George, Wilcox, Adam
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2002.0090001
Electronic communication among clinicians and patients is becoming an essential part of medical practice. Evaluation and selection of these electronic systems, called personal clinical electronic communication (PCEC) systems, can be a difficult task in institutions that have no prior experience with such systems. It is particularly difficult in the clinical context. To directly address this point, the authors consulted a group of potential users affiliated with a nationally recognized telemedicine [...]
Author(s): Sarkar, Indra Neil, Starren, Justin
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1037
A comprehensive and timely response to current and future bioterrorist attacks requires a data acquisition, threat detection, and response infrastructure with unprecedented scope in time and space. Fortunately, biomedical informaticians have developed and implemented architectures, methodologies, and tools at the local and the regional levels that can be immediately pressed into service for the protection of our populations from these attacks. These unique contributions of the discipline of biomedical informatics [...]
Author(s): Kohane, Isaac S
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1054
During the 2001 AMIA Annual Symposium, the Anesthesia, Critical Care, and Emergency Medicine Working Group hosted the Roundtable on Bioterrorism Detection. Sixty-four people attended the roundtable discussion, during which several researchers discussed public health surveillance systems designed to enhance early detection of bioterrorism events. These systems make secondary use of existing clinical, laboratory, paramedical, and pharmacy data or facilitate electronic case reporting by clinicians. This paper combines case reports of [...]
Author(s): Lober, William B, Karras, Bryant Thomas, Wagner, Michael M, Overhage, J Marc, Davidson, Arthur J, Fraser, Hamish, Trigg, Lisa J, Mandl, Kenneth D, Espino, Jeremy U, Tsui, Fu-Chiang
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1052
Author(s): Miller, Randolph A
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2002.0090087