Corrigendum to: Reconsidering hospital EHR adoption at the dawn of HITECH: implications of the reported 9% adoption of a "basic" EHR.
Author(s): Everson, Jordan, Rubin, Joshua C, Friedman, Charles P
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocab213
Author(s): Everson, Jordan, Rubin, Joshua C, Friedman, Charles P
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocab213
Recent changes to billing policy have reduced documentation requirements for outpatient notes, providing an opportunity to rethink documentation workflows. While many providers use templates to write notes-whether to insert short phrases or draft entire notes-we know surprisingly little about how these templates are used in practice. In this retrospective cross-sectional study, we observed the templates that primary providers and other members of the care team used to write the provider [...]
Author(s): Rule, Adam, Hribar, Michelle R
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocab230
The aim of this study was to collect and synthesize evidence regarding data quality problems encountered when working with variables related to social determinants of health (SDoH).
Author(s): Cook, Lily A, Sachs, Jonathan, Weiskopf, Nicole G
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocab199
Author(s): Yang, Jiannan, Xu, Zhongzhi, Wu, William Ka Kei, Chu, Qian, Zhang, Qingpeng
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocab214
This work examined the secondary use of clinical data from the electronic health record (EHR) for screening our healthcare worker (HCW) population for potential exposures to patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).
Author(s): Hong, Peter, Herigon, Joshua C, Uptegraft, Colby, Samuel, Bassem, Brown, D Levin, Bickel, Jonathan, Hron, Jonathan D
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocab231
The COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) pandemic response at the Medical University of South Carolina included virtual care visits for patients with suspected severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection. The telehealth system used for these visits only exports a text note to integrate with the electronic health record, but structured and coded information about COVID-19 (eg, exposure, risk factors, symptoms) was needed to support clinical care and early research [...]
Author(s): Meystre, Stéphane M, Heider, Paul M, Kim, Youngjun, Davis, Matthew, Obeid, Jihad, Madory, James, Alekseyenko, Alexander V
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocab186
Over a 31-year span as Director of the US National Library of Medicine (NLM), Donald A.B. Lindberg, MD, and his extraordinary NLM colleagues fundamentally changed the field of biomedical and health informatics-with a resulting impact on biomedicine that is much broader than its influence on any single subfield. This article provides substance to bolster that claim. The review is based in part on the informatics section of a new book [...]
Author(s): Miller, Randolph A, Shortliffe, Edward H
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocab245
Author(s): Perez-Pozuelo, Ignacio, Spathis, Dimitris, Gifford-Moore, Jordan, Morley, Jessica, Cowls, Josh
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocab198
Excessive electronic health record (EHR) alerts reduce the salience of actionable alerts. Little is known about the frequency of interruptive alerts across health systems and how the choice of metric affects which users appear to have the highest alert burden.
Author(s): Orenstein, Evan W, Kandaswamy, Swaminathan, Muthu, Naveen, Chaparro, Juan D, Hagedorn, Philip A, Dziorny, Adam C, Moses, Adam, Hernandez, Sean, Khan, Amina, Huth, Hannah B, Beus, Jonathan M, Kirkendall, Eric S
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocab179
Large amounts of health data are becoming available for biomedical research. Synthesizing information across databases may capture more comprehensive pictures of patient health and enable novel research studies. When no gold standard mappings between patient records are available, researchers may probabilistically link records from separate databases and analyze the linked data. However, previous linked data inference methods are constrained to certain linkage settings and exhibit low power. Here, we present [...]
Author(s): Zhang, Harrison G, Hejblum, Boris P, Weber, Griffin M, Palmer, Nathan P, Churchill, Susanne E, Szolovits, Peter, Murphy, Shawn N, Liao, Katherine P, Kohane, Isaac S, Cai, Tianxi
DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocab187