Cochrane Database Syst Rev
April 2014
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe increasing volume of data describing human disease processes and the growing complexity of understanding, managing, and sharing such data presents a huge challenge for clinicians and medical researchers. This paper presents the @neurIST system, which provides an infrastructure for biomedical research while aiding clinical care, by bringing together heterogeneous data and complex processing and computing services. Although @neurIST targets the investigation and treatment of cerebral aneurysms, the system's architecture is generic enough that it could be adapted to the treatment of other diseases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStud Health Technol Inform
November 2008
Research on computer interpretable clinical guidelines has largely focused on individual points of care rather than processes of care. Whether we consider simple aids like clinical alerts and reminders or more sophisticated data interpretation and decision-making, guideline developers tend to focus on specific tasks rather than processes like care plans and pathways which are extended in time. In contrast, research on business process modelling has demonstrated notations and tools which deal directly with process modelling, but has not been concerned with problems like data interpretation and decision making.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe 2006 EORTC guidelines for erythropoietic proteins in cancer-related anemia provide the most up-to-date assessment of the evidence base. Considering general concerns in medicine about clinicians' adoption of evidence-based guidelines, it is critical to find ways of bringing guidelines to the point of care. We describe the rationale behind RESPOND, a web-based clinical guidance system based on the EORTC guidelines, and the methodologies of two studies conducted to validate the system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReviewing the history , one is impressed by the remarkable speed with which the grand and powerful idea of creating a new profession of veterinary medicine spread throughout the world (even long before the emergence of electronic transmission). Four factors stand out as key components to this successful dissemination. First, there was the magnificent idea of veterinary education coupled to the powerful motivation of Bourgelat.
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