A Harmonized Data Quality Assessment Terminology and Framework for the Secondary Use of Electronic Health Record Data
Kahn M, Callahan T, Barnard J, Bauck A, Brown J, Davidson B, Estiri H, Goerg C, Holve E, Johnson S, Liaw S, Hamilton-Lopez M, Meeker D, Ong T, Ryan P, Shang N, Weiskopf N, Weng C, Zozus M, Schilling L. A Harmonized Data Quality Assessment Terminology and Framework for the Secondary Use of Electronic Health Record Data. Healthcare 2016, 4: 1244. PMID: 27713905, PMCID: PMC5051581, DOI: 10.13063/2327-9214.1244.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchDQ assessmentEHR dataElectronic health record dataHealth record dataData quality assessmentElectronic health dataOperational analyticsData ownersAnalytics expertsData producersDQ issuesSet of termsSecondary useLogical frameworkOrganizational dataIterative refinementDQ frameworkHealth dataRecord dataInitial setUsersCommon approachFrameworkFuture workCommon understandingCharacterizing treatment pathways at scale using the OHDSI network
Hripcsak G, Ryan P, Duke J, Shah N, Park R, Huser V, Suchard M, Schuemie M, DeFalco F, Perotte A, Banda J, Reich C, Schilling L, Matheny M, Meeker D, Pratt N, Madigan D. Characterizing treatment pathways at scale using the OHDSI network. Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America 2016, 113: 7329-7336. PMID: 27274072, PMCID: PMC4941483, DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1510502113.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAdministrative claims dataTreatment pathwaysClaims dataType 2 diabetes mellitusFirst-line medicationElectronic health record dataClinical trial resultsObservational researchHealth record dataElectronic health recordsDiabetes mellitusHypertension patientsDepression patientsConsistent therapyObservational studyOHDSI networkObservational Health Data SciencesPatientsTrial resultsClinical hypothesisHealth recordsRecord dataSignificant heterogeneityHealth Data SciencesHypertensionCognitive reflection and antibiotic prescribing for acute respiratory infections
Pineros D, Doctor J, Friedberg M, Meeker D, Linder J. Cognitive reflection and antibiotic prescribing for acute respiratory infections. Family Practice 2016, 33: 309-311. PMID: 27006411, PMCID: PMC4931815, DOI: 10.1093/fampra/cmw015.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAcute respiratory infectionsAntibiotic prescribing ratesAntibiotic prescribingPrescribing ratesRespiratory infectionsCommon clinical decisionsPrescription of antibioticsElectronic health record dataPrimary care practicesHealth record dataCare practicesClinicians' tendenciesClinical decisionPrescribingRecord dataCliniciansInfectionAntibioticsHigher scoresScoresPsychological testsCare