Response to Lapkoff and Sittig.
Author(s): Poikonen, John, Fotsch, Edward, Lehmann, Christoph U
DOI: 10.4338/ACI2017050081
Author(s): Poikonen, John, Fotsch, Edward, Lehmann, Christoph U
DOI: 10.4338/ACI2017050081
The International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) is the World Health Organization's standard for describing health and health-related states. Examples of how the ICF has been used in Electronic Health Records (EHRs) have not been systematically summarized and described yet.
Author(s): Maritz, Roxanne, Aronsky, Dominik, Prodinger, Birgit
DOI: 10.4338/ACI2017050078
Patient access to care and long wait times has been identified as major problems in outpatient delivery systems. These aspects impact medical staff productivity, service quality, clinic efficiency, and health-care cost.
Author(s): Huang, Yu Li
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2015-08-RA-0097
Electronic Health Records (EHRs) have been quickly implemented for meaningful use incentives; however these implementations have been associated with provider dissatisfaction and burnout. There are no previously reported instances of a comprehensive EHR educational program designed to engage providers and assist in improving efficiency and understanding of the EHR. Utilizing adult learning theory as a framework, Stanford Children's Health designed a tailored provider efficiency program with various inputs from: (1) [...]
Author(s): Stevens, Lindsay A, DiAngi, Yumi T, Schremp, Jonathan D, Martorana, Monet J, Miller, Roberta E, Lee, Tzielan C, Pageler, Natalie M
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2017-04-0054
Twenty-four hour ambulatory electrocardiograms ("Holter" monitors) are a key diagnostic test in cardiology. Commercial electronic medical record (EMR) tools have not been designed for pediatric Holter monitor reporting and paper-based methods are inefficient.
Author(s): Webster, Gregory, Ward, Kendra, Deal, Barbara J, Anderson, Jeffrey B, Tsao, Sabrina
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2017-03-RA-0051
OBJECTIVE: To refine the Physician Documentation Quality Instrument (PDQI) and test the validity and reliability of the 9-item version (PDQI-9). METHODS: Three sets each of admission notes, progress notes and discharge summaries were evaluated by two groups of physicians using the PDQI-9 and an overall general assessment: one gold standard group consisting of program or assistant program directors (n=7), and the other of attending physicians or chief residents (n=24). The [...]
Author(s): Stetson, Peter D, Bakken, Suzanne, Wrenn, Jesse O, Siegler, Eugenia L
DOI: 10.4338/aci-2011-11-ra-0070
Healthcare organizations vary in the number of electronic medical record (EMR) systems they use. Some use a single EMR for nearly all care they provide, while others use EMRs from more than one vendor. These strategies create a mixture of advantages, risks and costs. Based on our experience in two organizations over a decade, we analyzed use of more than one EMR within our two health care organizations to identify [...]
Author(s): Payne, T, Fellner, J, Dugowson, C, Liebovitz, D, Fletcher, G
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2012-10-RA-0040
EHR clinical document synthesis by clinicians may be time-consuming and error-prone due to the complex organization of narratives, excessive redundancy within documents, and, at times, inadvertent proliferation of data inconsistencies. Development of EHR systems that are easily adaptable to the user's work processes requires research into visualization techniques that can optimize information synthesis at the point of care.
Author(s): Farri, O, Rahman, A, Monsen, K A, Zhang, R, Pakhomov, S V, Pieczkiewicz, D S, Speedie, S M, Melton, G B
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2012-05-RA-0017
Describe the planning, decisions, and implementation results experienced during the large-scale transition from one EHR to another throughout a large academic health system, which occurred simultaneously throughout both in-patient and all ambulatory settings.
Author(s): Gettinger, A, Csatari, A
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2012-04-R-0014
Georgetown University has a student run Emergency Medical Services (EMS) organization with over 100 emergency medical technicians (EMTs). We set out to determine whether implementing an electronic patient care report (ePCR) system was associated with improved physical exam documentation.
Author(s): Katzer, R, Barton, D J, Adelman, S, Clark, S, Seaman, E L, Hudson, K B
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2012-03-RA-0008