keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37284487/the-application-of-knowledge-based-clinical-decision-support-systems-to-enhance-adherence-to-evidence-based-medicine-in-chronic-disease
#21
REVIEW
Marsa Gholamzadeh, Hamidreza Abtahi, Reza Safdari
Among the technology-based solutions, clinical decision support systems (CDSSs) have the ability to keep up with clinicians with the latest evidence in a smart way. Hence, the main objective of our study was to investigate the applicability and characteristics of CDSSs regarding chronic disease. The Web of Science, Scopus, OVID, and PubMed databases were searched using keywords from January 2000 to February 2023. The review was completed according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses checklist...
2023: Journal of Healthcare Engineering
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37215335/best-practices-for-the-design-of-covid-19-dashboards
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dillon Malkani, Melina Malkani, Neel Singh, Eesha Madan
Since 2020, health informaticians have developed and enhanced public-facing COVID-19 dashboards worldwide. The improvement of dashboards implemented by health informaticians will ultimately benefit the public in making better healthcare decisions and improve population-level healthcare outcomes. The authors evaluated 100 US city, county, and state government COVID-19 health dashboards and identified the top 10 best practices to be considered when creating a public health dashboard. These features include 1) easy navigation, 2) high usability, 3) use of adjustable thresholds, 4) use of diverse chart selection, 5) compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, 6) use of charts with tabulated data, 7) incorporated user feedback, 8) simplicity of design, 9) adding clear descriptions for charts, and 10) comparison data with other entities...
2023: Perspectives in Health Information Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37203775/how-do-informaticians-and-it-architects-collaborate-or-not-a-case-study-from-a-public-health-care-provider
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anna Rossander
Despite years of work from both informaticians and IT-architects interoperability within healthcare is still low. This explorative case study performed on a well-staffed public health care provider shows that the involved roles were unclear, processes did not include each other, and that tooling was incompatible. However, interest in collaboration was high and technical advances and inhouse development were seen as incentives for increased collaboration.
May 18, 2023: Studies in Health Technology and Informatics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37203720/access-to-development-opportunities-in-biomedical-and-health-informatics
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sidsel Villumsen, Rikke Amalie Agergaard Jensen, Klaus Nielsen, Ouafa Rian, Charlotte Jonasson
In between users and trained informaticians, we find a group of people carrying out important work in implementing and further developing health information technology, without access to formal biomedical and health informatics (BMHI) training. Study findings show what is required of novices in BMHI to gain access to communities of practice through which expertise can be developed.
May 18, 2023: Studies in Health Technology and Informatics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37131499/software-tool-support-for-collaborative-virtual-multi-site-molecular-tumor-boards
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthieu-P Schapranow, Florian Borchert, Nina Bougatf, Hauke Hund, Roland Eils
The availability of high-throughput molecular diagnostics builds the foundation for Molecular Tumor Boards (MTBs). Although more fine-grained data is expected to support decision making of oncologists, assessment of data is complex and time-consuming slowing down the implementation of MTBs, e.g., due to retrieval of the latest medical publications, assessment of clinical evidence, or linkage to the latest clinical guidelines. We share our findings from analysis of existing tumor board processes and defininion of clinical processes for the adoption of MTBs...
2023: SN computer science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37065355/imaging-in-healthcare-a-glance-at-the-present-and-a-glimpse-into-the-future
#26
REVIEW
Eman Nabrawi, Abdullah T Alanazi
The utilization of artificial intelligence (AI) applications in medical imaging relies heavily on imaging informatics. That is a one-of-a-kind professional who works at the crossroads of clinical radiography, data science, and information technology. Imaging informaticians are becoming crucial players in expanding, assessing, and implementing AI in the medical setting. Teleradiology will continue to be a cost-effective healthcare facility that expands. Vendor neutral archive (VNA) isolates image presentation and storing systems, permitting platforms to develop quickly, and is a repository for organization-wide healthcare image data...
March 2023: Curēus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36990457/the-voice-of-the-patient-and-the-electronic-health-record
#27
EDITORIAL
Thomas H Payne, Christoph U Lehmann, Alina K Zatzick
The patient's voice, which we define as the words the patient uses found in notes and messages and other sources, and their preferences for care and its outcomes, is too small a part of the electronic health record (EHR). To address this shortcoming will require innovation, research, funding, perhaps architectural changes to commercial EHRs, and that we address barriers that have resulted in this state, including clinician burden and financial drivers for care. Advantages to greater patient voice may accrue to many groups of EHR users and to patients themselves...
March 2023: Applied Clinical Informatics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36917089/enhancing-the-nation-s-public-health-information-infrastructure-a-report-from-the-acmi-symposium
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brian E Dixon, Catherine Staes, Jessica Acharya, Katie S Allen, Joel Hartsell, Theresa Cullen, Leslie Lenert, Donald W Rucker, Harold Lehmann
The COVID-19 pandemic exposed multiple weaknesses in the nation's public health system. Therefore, the American College of Medical Informatics selected "Rebuilding the Nation's Public Health Informatics Infrastructure" as the theme for its annual symposium. Experts in biomedical informatics and public health discussed strategies to strengthen the US public health information infrastructure through policy, education, research, and development. This article summarizes policy recommendations for the biomedical informatics community postpandemic...
April 19, 2023: Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association: JAMIA
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36912870/assessment-of-stakeholder-perceptions-and-attitudes-toward-health-data-governance-principles-in-botswana-web-based-survey
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kagiso Ndlovu, Kabelo Leonard Mauco, Star Chibemba, Steven Wanyee, Tom Oluoch
BACKGROUND: The use of information and communication technologies for health-eHealth-is described as having potential to improve the quality of health care service delivery. Consequently, there is an increased global trend toward adoption of eHealth interventions by health care systems worldwide. Despite the proliferation of eHealth solutions, many health care institutions especially in transitioning countries are struggling to attain effective data governance approaches. The Ministry of Health in Botswana is an exemplar institution continually seeking better approaches to strengthen health data governance (HDG) approaches following the adoption of eHealth solutions...
March 13, 2023: JMIR Formative Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36869772/racism-and-electronic-health-records-ehrs-perspectives-for-research-and-practice
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Srinivas Emani, Jorge A Rodriguez, David W Bates
Informatics researchers and practitioners have started exploring racism related to the implementation and use of electronic health records (EHRs). While this work has begun to expose structural racism which is a fundamental driver of racial and ethnic disparities, there is a lack of inclusion of concepts of racism in this work. This perspective provides a classification of racism at 3 levels-individual, organizational, and structural-and offers recommendations for future research, practice, and policy. Our recommendations include the need to capture and use structural measures of social determinants of health to address structural racism, intersectionality as a theoretical framework for research, structural competency training, research on the role of prejudice and stereotyping in stigmatizing documentation in EHRs, and actions to increase the diversity of private sector informatics workforce and participation of minority scholars in specialty groups...
March 3, 2023: Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association: JAMIA
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36867507/evaluation-of-an-emergency-department-visit-data-mental-health-dashboard
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Amy Ising, Anna Waller, Leah Frerichs
CONTEXT: Local health departments (LHDs) need timely county-level and subcounty-level data to monitor health-related trends, identify health disparities, and inform areas of highest need for interventions as part of their ongoing assessment responsibilities; yet, many health departments rely on secondary data that are not timely and cannot provide subcounty insights. OBJECTIVE: We developed and evaluated a mental health dashboard in Tableau for an LHD audience featuring statewide syndromic surveillance emergency department (ED) data in North Carolina from the North Carolina Disease Event Tracking and Epidemiologic Collection Tool (NC DETECT)...
March 2, 2023: Journal of Public Health Management and Practice: JPHMP
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36795463/thought-leader-perspectives-on-the-benefits-barriers-and-enablers-for-routinely-collected-electronic-health-data-to-support-professional-development-qualitative-study
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bernard Bucalon, Emma Whitelock-Wainwright, Chris Williams, Jeanette Conley, Martin Veysey, Judy Kay, Tim Shaw
BACKGROUND: Hospitals routinely collect large amounts of administrative data such as length of stay, 28-day readmissions, and hospital-acquired complications; yet, these data are underused for continuing professional development (CPD). First, these clinical indicators are rarely reviewed outside of existing quality and safety reporting. Second, many medical specialists view their CPD requirements as time-consuming, having minimal impact on practice change and improving patient outcomes...
February 16, 2023: Journal of Medical Internet Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36787885/defining-and-scoping-participatory-health-informatics-an-edelphi-study
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kerstin Denecke, Octavio Rivera-Romero, Carolyn Petersen, Marge Benham-Hutchins, Miguel Cabrer, Shauna Davies, Rebecca Grainger, Rada Hussein, Guillermo Lopez Campos, Fernando J Martin-Sanchez, Mollie McKillop, Mark Merolli, Talya Miron-Shatz, Jesús Daniel Trigo, Graham Wright, Rolf Wynn, Carol Hullin, Elia Gabarron
BACKGROUND: Health care has evolved to support the involvement of individuals in decision making by, for example, using mobile apps and wearables that may help empower people to actively participate in their treatment and health monitoring. While the term "participatory health informatics" (PHI) has emerged in literature to describe these activities, along with the use of social media for health purposes, the scope of the research field of PHI is not yet well defined. OBJECTIVE: To propose a preliminary definition of PHI and define the scope of the field...
February 14, 2023: Methods of Information in Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36752649/healthcare-utilization-is-a-collider-an-introduction-to-collider-bias-in-ehr-data-reuse
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicole G Weiskopf, David A Dorr, Christie Jackson, Harold P Lehmann, Caroline A Thompson
OBJECTIVES: Collider bias is a common threat to internal validity in clinical research but is rarely mentioned in informatics education or literature. Conditioning on a collider, which is a variable that is the shared causal descendant of an exposure and outcome, may result in spurious associations between the exposure and outcome. Our objective is to introduce readers to collider bias and its corollaries in the retrospective analysis of electronic health record (EHR) data. TARGET AUDIENCE: Collider bias is likely to arise in the reuse of EHR data, due to data-generating mechanisms and the nature of healthcare access and utilization in the United States...
February 8, 2023: Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association: JAMIA
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36624490/development-of-a-real-world-database-for-asthma-and-copd-the-singhealth-duke-nus-gsk-copd-and-asthma-real-world-evidence-sdg-care-collaboration
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sean Shao Wei Lam, Andrew Hao Sen Fang, Mariko Siyue Koh, Sumitra Shantakumar, See-Hwee Yeo, David Bruce Matchar, Marcus Eng Hock Ong, Ken Mei Ting Poon, Liming Huang, Sudha Harikrishan, Dominique Milea, Des Burke, Dave Webb, Narayanan Ragavendran, Ngiap Chuan Tan, Chian Min Loo
PURPOSE: The SingHealth-Duke-GlaxoSmithKline COPD and Asthma Real-world Evidence (SDG-CARE) collaboration was formed to accelerate the use of Singaporean real-world evidence in research and clinical care. A centerpiece of the collaboration was to develop a near real-time database from clinical and operational data sources to inform healthcare decision making and research studies on asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). METHODS: Our multidisciplinary team, including clinicians, epidemiologists, data scientists, medical informaticians and IT engineers, adopted the hybrid waterfall-agile project management methodology to develop the SingHealth COPD and Asthma Data Mart (SCDM)...
January 9, 2023: BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36521422/towards-the-european-health-data-space-ehds-ecosystem-a-survey-research-on-future-health-data-scenarios
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rada Hussein, Lucas Scherdel, Frederic Nicolet, Fernando Martin-Sanchez
OBJECTIVE: The European Health Data Space (EHDS) aims to provide better exchange and expand access to health data across Europe. In this way, the EHDS will support healthcare delivery (known as the "primary use of data") and facilitate access to health data for research and policy-making purposes (known as the "secondary use of data"). To achieve this goal, we need to build the required ecosystem of the EHDS with all healthcare stakeholders. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We conducted a survey research study to explore the health informaticians' recommendations on future health data scenarios shaping the EHDS ecosystem...
December 9, 2022: International Journal of Medical Informatics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36521421/unlocking-the-ehealth-professionals-career-pathways-a-case-of-gulf-cooperation-council-countries
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nasriah Zakaria, Norhayati Zakaria, Omar Alnobani, Manal AlMalki, Osama El-Hassan, Mohammed I Alhefzi, Mowafa Househ, Amr Jamal
BACKGROUND: During the past two decades, various sectors and industries have undergone digital transformation. Healthcare is poised to make a full transformation in the near future. Although steps have been taken toward creating an infrastructure for digital health in the Middle East, as it stands, digital health is still an emerging field here. The current global health care crisis has underscoredthe need for digitization of the healthcare sector to provide high-value, high-quality care and knowledge generation...
November 11, 2022: International Journal of Medical Informatics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36463864/provocations-for-reimagining-informatics-approaches-to-health-equity
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rupa S Valdez, Jessica S Ancker, Tiffany C Veinot
As the informatics community commits to the goal of advancing health equity, it is essential that we openly critique our current approaches and reimagine the ways in which we design, implement, evaluate, and advocate for policies related to informatics interventions. In this paper, we present five provocations as a starting point for building more conscientious informatics practice in service of this goal: 1) Health informatics interventions can create an "illusion of impactful action" without significant material benefits for marginalized patients, families, and communities; 2) Health informatics interventions target the wrong stakeholders, the wrong processes, and the wrong technologies to achieve equity; 3) Informaticians must conceptualize health literacy and other factors shaping patients' experiences as a system-level rather than individual-level characteristic; 4) Informatics interventions wrongly assume that interacting contextual factors can be meaningfully captured by over-simplified structured variables; and 5) Informatics interventions often specify the wrong system boundaries and solution space...
August 2022: Yearbook of Medical Informatics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36409945/the-emergency-medicine-education-and-research-by-global-experts-emerge-network-challenges-and-lessons-learned
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Prashant Mahajan, Shu-Ling Chong, Vijaya Arun Kumar, Prerna Batra, Apoorva Belle, Ben Bloom, Chung-Hsien Chaou, Ulf Ekelund, Sagar Galwankar, Johanna Kaartinen, Vimal Krishnan, Qingbian Ma, Paul M Middleton, Anna Miethke Morais, Chip Jin Ng, Daniel Osei-Kwame, Dominik Roth, Rasha Sawaya, Sanjeev Singh, Tej Prakash Sinha, Mabel Vasnaik, Katie Walker, Adriana Yock
INTRODUCTION: The Emergency Medicine Education and Research by Global Experts (EMERGE) network was formed to generate and translate evidence to improve global emergency care. We share the challenges faced and lessons learned in establishing a global research network. METHODS: We describe the challenges encountered when EMERGE proposed the development of a global emergency department (ED) visit registry. The proposed registry was to be a six-month, retrospective, deidentified, minimal dataset of routinely collected variables, such as patient demographics, diagnosis, and disposition...
October 18, 2022: Western Journal of Emergency Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36385408/how-providers-can-optimize-effective-and-safe-scribe-use-a-qualitative-study
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sky Corby, Joan S Ash, Sarah T Florig, Vishnu Mohan, James Becton, Nicholas Solberg, Robby Bergstrom, Benjamin Orwoll, Christopher Hoekstra, Jeffrey A Gold
BACKGROUND: The use of electronic health records has generated an increase in after-hours and weekend work for providers. To alleviate this situation, the hiring of medical scribes has rapidly increased. Given the lack of scribe industry standards and the wide variance in how providers and scribes work together, it could potentially create new patient safety-related risks. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this paper was to identify how providers can optimize the effective and safe use of scribes...
November 16, 2022: Journal of General Internal Medicine
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