Physician satisfaction with order entry systems.
Author(s): Patterson, Robert
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1022
Author(s): Patterson, Robert
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1022
This study sought to assess the ability of medical and nurse practitioner students to use MEDLINE to obtain evidence for answering clinical questions and to identify factors associated with the successful answering of questions.
Author(s): Hersh, William R, Crabtree, M Katherine, Hickam, David H, Sacherek, Lynetta, Friedman, Charles P, Tidmarsh, Patricia, Mosbaek, Craig, Kraemer, Dale
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m0996
Despite the fact that nursing informatics is entering its third decade as a specialty within nursing, many definitions still exist to describe the field. This paper offers a rationale for a definition for nursing informatics and a critical analysis of past definitions. An organizing framework of technology-oriented, conceptual, and role-oriented definitions is used to critique these definitions. Subsequently, a revised definition is proposed. This evolutionary definition integrates critical concepts from [...]
Author(s): Staggers, Nancy, Thompson, Cheryl Bagley
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m0946
Electronic communication among clinicians and patients is becoming an essential part of medical practice. Evaluation and selection of these electronic systems, called personal clinical electronic communication (PCEC) systems, can be a difficult task in institutions that have no prior experience with such systems. It is particularly difficult in the clinical context. To directly address this point, the authors consulted a group of potential users affiliated with a nationally recognized telemedicine [...]
Author(s): Sarkar, Indra Neil, Starren, Justin
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1037
Author(s): Brennan, Patricia Flatley, Yasnoff, William A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1060
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and its predecessor organizations-collectively referred to here as AHRQ-have a productive history of funding research and development in the field of medical informatics, with grant investments since 1968 totaling $107 million. Many computerized interventions that are commonplace today, such as drug interaction alerts, had their genesis in early AHRQ initiatives. This review provides a historical perspective on AHRQ investment in medical informatics research [...]
Author(s): Fitzmaurice, J Michael, Adams, Karen, Eisenberg, John M
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m0867
To protect public health and national safety, AMIA recommends that the federal government dedicate technologic resources and medical informatics expertise to create a national health information infrastructure (NHII). An NHII provides the underlying information utility that connects local health providers and health officials through high-speed networks to national data systems necessary to detect and track global threats to public health. AMIA strongly recommends the accelerated development and wide-scale deployment of [...]
Author(s): Tang, Paul C, ,
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1051
The United States currently faces several new, concurrent large-scale health crises as a result of terrorist activity. In particular, three major health issues have risen sharply in urgency and public consciousness--bioterrorism, the threat of widespread delivery of agents of illness; mass disasters, local events that produce large numbers of casualties and overwhelm the usual capacity of health care delivery systems; and the delivery of optimal health care to remote military [...]
Author(s): Teich, Jonathan M, Wagner, Michael M, Mackenzie, Colin F, Schafer, Klaus O
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1055
The purpose of the study was to evaluate the uses of handheld computers (also called personal digital assistants, or PDAs) in family practice residency programs in the United States.
Author(s): Criswell, Dan F, Parchman, Michael L
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2002.0090080
The Columbia University Informatics for Diabetes Education and Telemedicine IDEATel) project is a four-year demonstration project funded by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services with the overall goal of evaluating the feasibility, acceptability, effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness of telemedicine. The focal point of the intervention is the home telemedicine unit (HTU), which provides four functions: synchronous videoconferencing over standard telephone lines, electronic transmission for fingerstick glucose and blood pressure readings [...]
Author(s): Starren, Justin, Hripcsak, George, Sengupta, Soumitra, Abbruscato, C R, Knudson, Paul E, Weinstock, Ruth S, Shea, Steven
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2002.0090025