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Showing papers by "James F. Fries published in 1974"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Traditional and proposed formats for manual medical information storage are surveyed for features which improve or impede the access-time to clinical data.
Abstract: Access to information is the ultimate purpose of data storage systems. The medical record is a data storage and retrieval system. Its organization, however, has confounded the purpose of providing accessible data to the physician who must make the clinical decision. Traditional and proposed formats for manual medical information storage are surveyed for features which improve or impede the access-time to clinical data. Time studies demonstrating the effect of different formats upon the task of retrieving standard information from the medical record are presented. With a traditional record in his hand, the physician requires an average of 30 to 40 seconds to answer very simple clinical questions. A medical record with fixed-format, flow sheet organization permits access to certain data in approximately one-fourth the time of other formats, together with a significant improvement in the accuracy of retrieved information. Long access time to clinical data probably results in infrequent use of the traditional record for data retrieval. With more accessible data, information in the record may play a more active part in the clinical decision process.

83 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using this technic, specific clinical variables in systemic lupus erythematosus were assessed for their effect upon particular outcomes and clinical variables representing functional organ impairment were found to carry a worse prognosis than the popular serologic indicators.

80 citations




Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A randomized, double-blind, crossover study comparing the efficacy of intra-arterially administered reserpine with physiological saline in patients with progressive systemic sclerosis and four with overlap syndromes with predominant features of scleroderma found no difference in efficacy.
Abstract: A randomized, double-blind, crossover study comparing the efficacy of intra-arterially administered reserpine with physiological saline was undertaken in 12 patients with progressive systemic sclerosis and four with overlap syndromes with predominant features of scleroderma. Patients were treated for either refractory digital ulcers or severe, incapacitating Raynaud phenomenon. Ten of 16 patients showed improvement with the injections. Favorable responses occurred in 12 of 26 patients given placebo injections and 12 of 25 patients given reserpine injections. No difference in efficacy between intra-arterial administration of reserpine and saline could be ascertained.

17 citations