Standardized coding of the medical problem list.
Author(s): Kuperman, G, Bates, D W
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1994.95153430
Author(s): Kuperman, G, Bates, D W
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1994.95153430
To examine the information needs of health care professionals in HIV-related clinical encounters, and to determine the suitability of existing information sources to address those needs.
Author(s): Giuse, N B, Huber, J T, Giuse, D A, Brown, C W, Bankowitz, R A, Hunt, S
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1994.95153427
Author(s): Tierney, W M, Overhage, J M, McDonald, C J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1994.95236170
Administrative records of the Department of Veterans Affairs (DVA) and the National Death Index were linked to create a four-year longitudinal database that describes the clinical status, hospital and nursing home use, and mortality for a nationwide cohort of persons admitted to DVA nursing homes (n = 23,039). Using Social Security Numbers as identifiers, the records of only 6% of these persons had logically inconsistent or implausible patterns. Nineteen percent [...]
Author(s): Williams, B C, Mehr, D R, Fries, B E
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1994.95236167
Author(s): Tuttle, M S
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1994.95236161
The American Medical Informatics Association (AMIA) has begun the process of long-range strategic plan development. The AMIA Board of Directors established an Ad Hoc Strategic Planning Task Force, with the goal of initiating such planning in November 1992. In January 1993, the Task Force convened a group of AMIA members in order to develop an initial set of goals and objectives. The group consisted of past and present AMIA Board [...]
Author(s): Greenes, R A
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1994.95236157
The Canon Group is an informal organization of medical informatics researchers who are working on the problem of developing a "deeper" representation formalism for use in exchanging data and developing applications. Individuals in the group represent experts in such areas as knowledge representation and computational linguistics, as well as in a variety of medical subdisciplines. All share the view that current mechanisms for the characterization of medical phenomena are either [...]
Author(s): Evans, D A, Cimino, J J, Hersh, W R, Huff, S M, Bell, D S
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1994.95236153
Development of a general natural-language processor that identifies clinical information in narrative reports and maps that information into a structured representation containing clinical terms.
Author(s): Friedman, C, Alderson, P O, Austin, J H, Cimino, J J, Johnson, S B
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1994.95236146