Publications by authors named "Jonathan A Handler"

Advanced practice nurse leaders are in key positions within health systems to provide time and resources for implementation and evaluation of digital health services. As virtual monitoring programs become more embedded within nursing, nurse leaders and educators need to ensure that nurses are prepared to work within interprofessional teams to administer and evaluate them. This article discusses challenges and implementation strategy considerations for data curation and analysis using large datasets from the Medicaid population for research.

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Purpose: Cancer patient navigators (CPNs) can decrease the time from diagnosis to treatment, but workloads vary widely, which may lead to burnout and less optimal navigation. Current practice for patient distribution among CPNs at our institution approximates random distribution. A literature search did not uncover previous reports of an automated algorithm to distribute patients to CPNs.

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Machine prediction algorithms (e.g., binary classifiers) often are adopted on the basis of claimed performance using classic metrics such as precision and recall.

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Mammography screening rates are typically lower in those with less economic advantage (EA). This study, conducted at an integrated health care system covering a mixed rurality population, assessed the ability of interventions (text messages linking to a Web microsite, digital health care workers, and a community health fair) to affect mammography screening rates and disparity in those rates among different EA populations. Payor type served as a proxy for greater (commercially insured) versus lower (Medicaid insured) EA.

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Clinical practice guidelines are developed to reduce variations in clinical practice, with the goal of improving health care quality and cost. However, evidence-based practice guidelines face barriers to dissemination, implementation, usability, integration into practice, and use. The American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) clinical policies have been shown to be safe and effective and are even cited by other specialties.

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We describe a future in which health and wellness are transformed by (1) the availability of definitive and unambiguous tests to prove or disprove each diagnosis, (2) new methods based in systems biology to help unravel the web of messages transmitted across cellular and subcellular networks, and (3) universal access to data that has been freed from data silos to produce true data liquidity for a constellation of purposes ranging from personal health management to population health research. We believe the resulting "connected health" environment will have a profound impact on every aspect of modern life.

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Purpose. Febrile neutropenia (FN) is a common, costly, and potentially fatal complication in oncology. While FN in the inpatient setting has been extensively studied, only one study has evaluated emergency department (ED) care for FN cancer patients.

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Metrics are the driver to positive change toward better patient care. However, the research into the metrics of the science of surge is incomplete, research funding is inadequate, and we lack a criterion standard metric for identifying and quantifying surge capacity. Therefore, a consensus working group was formed through a "viral invitation" process.

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Immediate access to existing clinical information is inadequate in current medical practice; lack of existing information causes or contributes to many classes of medical error, including diagnostic and treatment error. A review of the literature finds ample evidence to support a description of the problems caused by data that are missing or unavailable but little evidence to support one proposed solution over another. A primary recommendation of the Consensus Committee is that hospitals and departments should adopt systems that provide fast, ubiquitous, and unified access to all types of existing data.

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Computerized physician order entry (CPOE) and decision support systems (DSS) can reduce certain types of error but often slow clinicians and may increase other types of error. The net effect of these systems on an emergency department (ED) is unknown. The consensus participants combined published evidence with expert opinion to outline recommendations for success.

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A personal look at some of the developments in practical clinical informatics over the past two decades, with discussion of several successful projects, including the National Center for Emergency Medicine Informatics, the Azyxxi system, Federal Project ER One, the Institutes for Innovation in Medicine, the Medical MediaLab, Project Sentinel, and others. Lessons learned, and hints and suggestions for future developers and informaticists.

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Limitation of a bioterrorist anthrax attack will require rapid and accurate recognition of the earliest victims. To identify clinical characteristics of inhalational anthrax, we compared 47 historical cases (including 11 cases of bioterrorism-related anthrax) with 376 controls with community-acquired pneumonia or influenza-like illness. Nausea, vomiting, pallor or cyanosis, diaphoresis, altered mental status, and raised haematocrit were more frequently recorded in the inhalational anthrax cases than in either the community-acquired pneumonia or influenza-like illness controls.

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