Presentation of the Morris F. Collen Award to Donald A. B. Lindberg, MD.
Author(s): Masys, D R
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.0050214
Author(s): Masys, D R
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1995.0050214
To study the objectives, processes, and ideologies expressed during participatory design of information systems (PDIS) in health care.
Author(s): Sjöberg, C, Timpka, T
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050177
ACT/DB is a client-server database application for storing clinical trials and outcomes data, which is currently undergoing initial pilot use. It stores most of its data in entity-attribute-value form. Such data are segregated according to data type to allow indexing by value when possible, and binary large object data are managed in the same way as other data. ACT/DB lets an investigator design a study rapidly by defining the parameters [...]
Author(s): Nadkarni, P M, Brandt, C, Frawley, S, Sayward, F G, Einbinder, R, Zelterman, D, Schacter, L, Miller, P L
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050139
Author(s): Stead, W W
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050131
Guidelines regarding patient-provider electronic mail are presented. The intent is to provide guidance concerning computer-based communications between clinicians and patients within a contractual relationship in which the health-care provider has taken on an explicit measure of responsibility for the client's care. The guidelines address two interrelated aspects: effective interaction between the clinician and patient, and observance of medicolegal prudence. Recommendations for site-specific policy formulation are included.
Author(s): Kane, B, Sands, D Z
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050104
A primary goal of the University of Pittsburgh's 1990-94 UMLS-sponsored effort was to develop and evaluate PostDoc (a lexical indexing system) and Pindex (a statistical indexing system) comparatively, and then in combination as a hybrid system. Each system takes as input a portion of the free text from a narrative part of a patient's electronic medical record and returns a list of suggested MeSH terms to use in formulating a [...]
Author(s): Cooper, G F, Miller, R A
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050062
Conceptualization of the physical objects and spaces that constitute the human body at the macroscopic level of organization, specified as a machine-parseable ontology that, in its human-readable form, is comprehensible to both expert and novice users of anatomical information.
Author(s): Rosse, C, Mejino, J L, Modayur, B R, Jakobovits, R, Hinshaw, K P, Brinkley, J F
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050017
In 1986, the National Library of Medicine (NLM) assembled a large multidisciplinary, multisite team to work on the Unified Medical Language System (UMLS), a collaborative research project aimed at reducing fundamental barriers to the application of computers to medicine. Beyond its tangible products, the UMLS Knowledge Sources, and its influence on the field of informatics, the UMLS project is an interesting case study in collaborative research and development. It illustrates [...]
Author(s): Humphreys, B L, Lindberg, D A, Schoolman, H M, Barnett, G O
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1998.0050001
Objective: To use routine data from a comprehensive electronic medical record system to predict death among patients with reactive airways disease. Design: Retrospective cohort study conducted in an academic primary care internal medicine practice. Subjects were 1,536 adults with reactive airways disease: 542 with asthma and 994 with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Measurements: The dependent variable was death from any cause within 3 years following patients' first primary care [...]
Author(s): Tierney, W M, Murray, M D, Gaskins, D L, Zhou, X H
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040313
As in other areas of society, the Internet and the World Wide Web are becoming important topics in medical informatics. This is evident from the recent American Medical Informatics Association's 1996 Annual Fall Symposium, where the theme was "Beyond the Superhighway: Exploiting the Internet with Medical Informatics." Of the over 330 papers and abstracts published in the Proceedings, one third dealt with the Internet and/or the Web. In some cases [...]
Author(s): Cimino, J J
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040279