4 results match your criteria: "Minneapolis (Drs Pruinelli and Delaney); and University of Vermont Health Network[Affiliation]"
Comput Inform Nurs
October 2022
University of Minnesota School of Nursing, Minneapolis (Drs Pruinelli and Delaney); and University of Vermont Health Network, Burlington (Dr Freeman).
Comput Inform Nurs
August 2021
School of Nursing, University of Minnesota (Drs Pruinelli and Delaney), Minneapolis; and University of Vermont Health Network (Dr Freeman), Burlington.
Comput Inform Nurs
June 2021
Author Affiliations: School of Nursing (Dr Austin, Mr Lu, and Drs Geiger-Simpson, Ringdahl, Pruinelli, Lindquist, Monsen, and Delaney) and Earl E. Bakken Center for Spiritualty and Healing (Drs Austin, Ringdahl, Lindquist, and Monsen), University of Minnesota, Minneapolis; and College of Nursing, University of Arizona, Tucson (Dr Koithan).
The use of complementary and integrative health therapy strategies for a wide variety of health conditions is increasing and is rapidly becoming mainstream. However, little is known about how or if complementary and integrative health therapies are represented in the EHR. Standardized terminologies provide an organizing structure for health information that enable EHR representation and support shareable and comparable data; which may contribute to increased understanding of which therapies are being used for whom and for what purposes.
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September 2017
Author Affiliations: School of Nursing (Drs Westra, Johnson, Pruinelli, Park, Delaney, and Gao) and Institute for Health Informatics, University of Minnesota (Drs Westra, Delaney, and Speedie); Fairview Health Services & University of Minnesota Health (Drs Christie, LaFlamme, and Sherman), Minneapolis, MN.
The purpose of this study was to create information models from flowsheet data using a data-driven consensus-based method. Electronic health records contain a large volume of data about patient assessments and interventions captured in flowsheets that measure the same "thing," but the names of these observations often differ, according to who performs documentation or the location of the service (eg, pulse rate in an intensive care, the emergency department, or a surgical unit documented by a nurse or therapist or captured by automated monitoring). Flowsheet data are challenging for secondary use because of the existence of multiple semantically equivalent measures representing the same concepts.
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