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Management: Electronic Health Records (EHR)

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Total 31288 results found since Jan 2013.

ESO to Market TrackEMS System to Alert Hospitals of Incoming Critical EMS Patients
AUSTIN, Texas, December 14, 2017 -- ESO Solutions, Inc., and Innovative Communications, LLC, (InnoComm) have announced a new partnership to market TrackEMS, a system that notifies hospitals of incoming critical patients in real time, as an ESO product offering, officials with the two companies said. “With TrackEMS, paramedics and EMTs no longer need to interrupt patient care to give a radio report to the hospital about incoming patients,” said Allen Johnson, Vice President and General Manager of Analytics and Health Data Exchange at ESO. According to Johnson, TrackEMS allows delivery of critical patient information ...
Source: JEMS Administration and Leadership - December 14, 2017 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: ESO Solutions Tags: Administration and Leadership Industry News Source Type: news

Consider the Promises and Challenges of Medical Image Analyses Using Machine Learning
Medical imaging saves millions of lives each year, helping doctors detect and diagnose a wide range of diseases, from cancer and appendicitis to stroke and heart disease. Because non-invasive early disease detection saves so many lives, scientific investment continues to increase. Artifical intelligence (AI) has the potential to revolutionize the medical imaging industry by sifting through mountains of scans quickly and offering providers and patients with life-changing insights into a variety of diseases, injuries, and conditions that may be hard to detect without the supplemental technology. Images are the largest source...
Source: MDDI - June 2, 2020 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Partha S. Anbil and Michael T. Ricci Tags: Imaging Source Type: news

Importance of and Approach to Taking a History of Exposures to Occupational Respiratory Hazards
Semin Respir Crit Care Med DOI: 10.1055/s-0043-1766120Occupational respiratory diseases are caused by exposure to respiratory hazards at work. It is important to document those exposures and whether they are causing or exacerbating disease because these determinations can have important impacts on diagnosis, treatment, job restrictions, and eligibility for benefits. Without investigation, it is easy to miss clinically relevant exposures, especially in those with chronic diseases that can have work and nonwork causes. The first and most important step in identifying exposures to respiratory hazards at work is to take an app...
Source: Seminars in Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine - April 4, 2023 Category: Respiratory Medicine Authors: Weissman, David N. Radonovich, Lewis J. Tags: Review Article Source Type: research

Impatient About Electronic Health Records
“I’m impatient about realizing the benefits of electronic health records—we all are. But, as the futurist Roy Amara once cautioned, “We tend to overestimate the effect of a technology in the short run and underestimate the effect in the long run.” Amara’s law came to mind recently when six U.S. Senators published a report called “Reboot” [...]
Source: ICMCC: The International Council on Medical and Care Compunetics - May 24, 2013 Category: Information Technology Authors: Lodewijk Tags: News Benefits Infrastructure Source Type: news

Military CIOs give frank talk about EHRs
In a surprisingly candid conversation about iEHR, CIOs of the Military Health System and the U.S. Navy offered a glimpse into how their organization makes large IT decisions, most notably concerning the EHR it is looking to acquire. Big data:  None read more
Source: Healthcare IT News - June 14, 2013 Category: Information Technology Authors: Tom Sullivan Tags: Online Only Cayetano S. Thornton David Bowen Department of Defense MHS Microsoft Vista Navy United States Navy Virginia Hospitals & IDNs Electronic Health Records Vendors Health Information Exchange (HIE) Policy and Legislati Source Type: news

Stress Ulcer Prophylaxis in Hospitalized Patients, Subsequent Use in Primary Care, and Physicians' Opinions About Acid-Suppressive Therapy.
CONCLUSIONS: More than 90% of hospitalized patients received SUP; less than half of them had an indication for needing SUP. A large number of patients discharged on PPI/H2B continued to receive it in the outpatient setting at 6 months follow-up. Only 24% of physicians reported using SUP based on guidelines. Physician education and evidence-based validation of electronic health record order sets are potential areas for improvement. PMID: 26954653 [PubMed - in process]
Source: Southern Medical Journal - March 11, 2016 Category: Journals (General) Tags: South Med J Source Type: research

ESO Solutions Receives NEMSIS 3 Compliance Designation for New EHR Software
AUSTIN, TEXAS (December 11, 2015) – ESO Solutions, Inc., a leading provider of healthcare software and interoperability solutions, announced that its ESO Electronic Health Record (EHR) product has earned designation as compliant with the National EMS Information System (NEMSIS) Version 3.3.4. With this latest designation, ESO has now gained compliance in both the “Collect Data” and the “Receive and Process” compliance categories.  ESO’s Health Data Exchange (HDE) interoperability platform gained NEMSIS compliance in the “Receive and Process” category in October 2014. “Building NEMSIS 3–compliant pr...
Source: JEMS Administration and Leadership - December 18, 2015 Category: Emergency Medicine Tags: Documentation & Patient Care Reporting Administration and Leadership Industry News Technology Source Type: news

This Simple Strategy Could Help Doctors Ask Teens About Gender Identity
(Reuters Health) - Prompting doctors to ask adolescents and young adults about their gender identity may improve documentation of that information in electronic health records, according to a new study.  Documenting of gender identity “is really going to make a difference in what services are ultimately provided,” said lead author Dr. Stanley R. Vance Jr. of the University of California, San Francisco. Gender identity is how a people view themselves, that is, as male, female or something less specific. Gender identity may differ from the sex assigned at birth. Vance and coauthor Dr. Veronika Mesheriakova s...
Source: Healthy Living - The Huffington Post - December 29, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Provider Perspectives on Advance Care Planning Documentation in the Electronic Health Record.
CONCLUSION: Results suggest that providers desire standardized workflows for ACP discussion and documentation. New Medicare reimbursement for ACP and an increasing number of quality metrics for ACP are incentives for health-care systems to address barriers to ACP documentation. PMID: 28196448 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: The American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care - December 31, 2016 Category: Palliative Care Authors: Dillon E, Chuang J, Gupta A, Tapper S, Lai S, Yu P, Ritchie C, Tai-Seale M Tags: Am J Hosp Palliat Care Source Type: research

Data, Staff, and Money: Leadership Reflections on the Future of Public Health Informatics
Conclusions: Local health department leadership desires to have timely or even real-time data. Local health departments have a great potential to benefit from informatics, particularly electronic health records in advancing their administrative practices and service delivery, but financial and human capital represents the largest barrier. Interoperability of public health systems is highly desirable but hardly achievable in the presence of such barriers.
Source: Journal of Public Health Management and Practice - March 31, 2017 Category: Health Management Tags: Research Articles Source Type: research

The Circle of Care for Older Adults With Hearing Loss and Comorbidities: A Case Study of a Geriatric Audiology Clinic.
Conclusions In this clinic, successful outcomes were achieved by modifying audiology practice for clients with comorbidities. Increased interprofessional communication among clinicians in the circle of care could improve care planning and outcomes for older adults with hearing loss. PMID: 31026196 [PubMed - in process]
Source: Journal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHR - April 25, 2019 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Dupuis K, Reed M, Bachmann F, Lemke U, Pichora-Fuller MK Tags: J Speech Lang Hear Res Source Type: research

Primary Care Providers ’ Perspectives on Using Automated HIV Risk Prediction Models to Identify Potential Candidates for Pre-exposure Prophylaxis
AbstractIdentifying patients at increased risk for HIV acquisition can be challenging. Primary care providers (PCPs) may benefit from tools that help them identify appropriate candidates for HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). We and others have previously developed and validated HIV risk prediction models to identify PrEP candidates using electronic health records data. In the current study, we convened focus groups with PCPs to elicit their perspectives on using prediction models to identify PrEP candidates in clinical practice. PCPs were receptive to using prediction models to identify PrEP candidates. PCPs believed th...
Source: AIDS and Behavior - April 2, 2021 Category: Infectious Diseases Source Type: research

What Do Orthopaedists Believe Is Needed for Incorporating Patient-reported Outcome Measures into Clinical Care? A Qualitative Study
CONCLUSION: Despite the availability of PROMs, there are important barriers to incorporating and using PROMs in clinical care. Providing access to PROM scores without clearly understanding how and why surgeons may consider using or incorporating them into their clinical practice can result in expensive and underused systems that add little value for the clinician, patient, or organization.CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Involving front-line orthopaedic surgeons and leaders in shaping the design and structure of PROM systems is important for use in clinical care, but these interviewees seemed to see aggregate data as more valuable than...
Source: Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research - November 30, 2021 Category: Orthopaedics Authors: Robin R Whitebird Leif I Solberg Jeanette Y Ziegenfuss Christine K Norton Ella A Chrenka Marc Swiontkowski Megan Reams Elizabeth S Grossman Source Type: research