Translating knowledge into practice: passing the hot potato!
Author(s): Staggers, Nancy, Brennan, Patricia Flatley
DOI: 10.1197/j.jamia.m2529
Author(s): Staggers, Nancy, Brennan, Patricia Flatley
DOI: 10.1197/j.jamia.m2529
The anonymization of medical records is of great importance in the human life sciences because a de-identified text can be made publicly available for non-hospital researchers as well, to facilitate research on human diseases. Here the authors have developed a de-identification model that can successfully remove personal health information (PHI) from discharge records to make them conform to the guidelines of the Health Information Portability and Accountability Act.
Author(s): Szarvas, György, Farkas, Richárd, Busa-Fekete, Róbert
DOI: 10.1197/j.jamia.M2441
To characterize global structural features of large-scale biomedical terminologies using currently emerging statistical approaches.
Author(s): Bales, Michael E, Lussier, Yves A, Johnson, Stephen B
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2080
Cancer staging provides a basis for planning clinical management, but also allows for meaningful analysis of cancer outcomes and evaluation of cancer care services. Despite this, stage data in cancer registries is often incomplete, inaccurate, or simply not collected. This article describes a prototype software system (Cancer Stage Interpretation System, CSIS) that automatically extracts cancer staging information from medical reports. The system uses text classification techniques to train support vector [...]
Author(s): McCowan, Iain A, Moore, Darren C, Nguyen, Anthony N, Bowman, Rayleen V, Clarke, Belinda E, Duhig, Edwina E, Fry, Mary-Jane
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2130
To determine the accuracy of self-reported information from patients and families for use in a disease surveillance system.
Author(s): Bourgeois, Florence T, Porter, Stephen C, Valim, Clarissa, Jackson, Tiffany, Cook, E Francis, Mandl, Kenneth D
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2134
We implemented an automated vaccine adverse event surveillance and reporting system based in an ambulatory electronic medical record to improve underreporting and incomplete reporting that prevails in spontaneous systems. This automated system flags potential vaccine adverse events for the clinician when a diagnosis is entered, prompts clinicians to consider the vaccine as a cause of the condition, and facilitates reporting of suspected adverse events to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting [...]
Author(s): Hinrichsen, Virginia L, Kruskal, Benjamin, O'Brien, Megan A, Lieu, Tracy A, Platt, Richard
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2232
This study sought to describe the evolution, use, and user satisfaction of a patient Web site providing a shared medical record between patients and health professionals at Group Health Cooperative, a mixed-model health care financing and delivery organization based in Seattle, Washington.
Author(s): Ralston, James D, Carrell, David, Reid, Robert, Anderson, Melissa, Moran, Maureena, Hereford, James
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2302
Background Up to 38% of inpatient medication errors occur at the administration stage. Although they reduce prescribing errors, computerized provider order entry (CPOE) systems do not prevent administration errors or timing discrepancies. This study determined the degree to which CPOE medication orders matched actual dose administration times. METHODS At a 658-bed academic hospital with CPOE but lacking electronic medication administration charting, authors randomly selected adult patients with eligible medication orders [...]
Author(s): FitzHenry, Fern, Peterson, Josh F, Arrieta, Mark, Waitman, Lemuel R, Schildcrout, Jonathan S, Miller, Randolph A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2359
Electronic prescribing has improved the quality and safety of care. One barrier preventing widespread adoption is the potential detrimental impact on workflow. We used time-motion techniques to compare prescribing times at three ambulatory care sites that used paper-based prescribing, desktop, or laptop e-prescribing. An observer timed all prescriber (n = 27) and staff (n = 42) tasks performed during a 4-hour period. At the sites with optional e-prescribing >75% of [...]
Author(s): Hollingworth, William, Devine, Emily Beth, Hansen, Ryan N, Lawless, Nathan M, Comstock, Bryan A, Wilson-Norton, Jennifer L, Tharp, Kathleen L, Sullivan, Sean D
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2377
Languages used to specify computer-interpretable guidelines (CIGs) differ in their approaches to addressing particular modeling challenges. The main goals of this article are: (1) to examine the expressive power of CIG modeling languages, and (2) to define the differences, from the control-flow perspective, between process languages in workflow management systems and modeling languages used to design clinical guidelines.
Author(s): Mulyar, Nataliya, van der Aalst, Wil M P, Peleg, Mor
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.M2389