Book Details
Orange Code:86466
Paperback:342 pages
Publications:
Categories:
Sections:
1. Bringing Science to Medicine: An Interview with Larry Weed, Inventor of the Problem-Oriented Medical Record2. Medical Records That Guide and Teach3. Clinical Implications of an Accurate Problem List on Heart Failure Treatment4. Clinician Attitudes Toward and Use of Electronic Problem Lists: A Thematic Analysis5. Healthcare Provider Attitudes Towards the Problem List in an Electronic Health Record: A Mixed-Methods Qualitative Study6. Improving Completeness of Electronic Problem Lists Through Clinical Decision Support: A Randomized, Controlled Trial7. Computerized Physician Order Entry of Medications and Clinical Decision Support Can Improve Problem List Documentation Compliance8. Randomized Controlled Trial of an Automated Problem List With Improved Sensitivity9. Incomplete Care: On the Trail of Flaws in the System10. Leveraging Electronic Health Records to Support Chronic Disease Management: The Need for Temporal Data Views11. Indication-Based Prescribing Prevents Wrong-Patient Medication Errors In Computerized Provider Order Entry (CPOE)
Description:
Edited by a professor at Harvard Medical School who has extensive experience in this field, this important and timely book presents a variety of perspectives on the organization of patient medical records around patient problems, presenting a more effective problem-oriented approach rather than the traditional data-oriented approach. It is comprehensive, covering the history and importance of the electronic health record, the attitudes toward and use of problem lists, strategies to improve the problem list, and applications in practice of the problem list.
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