Individualized Drug Interaction Alerts
This project developed patient-tailored relevant warnings about drug-drug interactions and found that it reduced irrelevant alerts.
This project developed patient-tailored relevant warnings about drug-drug interactions and found that it reduced irrelevant alerts.
This study assessed the usability and impact of inpatient portals on patient experience, engagement, and perceptions of care.
This project developed and pilot-tested TJR App, a mobile application designed to help patients with osteoarthritis track their pain and activity, and found that app users were more likely to track symptoms consistently, when compared to non-users.
This project applied a user-centered design process to understand the needs and attitudes for sharing patient-collected lifelog data with providers to improve management and decision making.
This research developed an electronic health record prototype with a variety of functionalities focused on goal-directed work such as schedule coordination, task assignment, and information sharing to improve cognitive support among primary care providers.
The purpose of this research was to investigate the relationships between electronic health record adoption and usability, work environment, and patient and nurse outcomes.
This project developed a natural language processing electronic health record search tool that automatically identifies and ranks relevant clinical information based on a patient’s presenting complaint within the emergency department setting.
The research team developed and tested algorithms that can predict postoperative adverse outcomes with a high degree of accuracy.
This research study addressed the overuse of blood cultures to diagnose sepsis by developing an electronic health record-embedded clinical decision support tool that draws upon the strengths of analytical and naturalistic decision making.
This research team designed and tested an application called Power to the People to assist older patients to self-manage their chronic heart failure.