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James J. Cimino

Researcher at University of Alabama at Birmingham

Publications -  390
Citations -  14092

James J. Cimino is an academic researcher from University of Alabama at Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Unified Medical Language System & Information needs. The author has an hindex of 58, co-authored 367 publications receiving 12899 citations. Previous affiliations of James J. Cimino include Duke University & Rutgers University.

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Integrating Evidence into Clinical Information Systems for Nursing Decision Support

TL;DR: The authors' approaches use a variety of informatics methods to integrate evidence into CISs as a mechanism for providing decision support for evidence-based practice in a manner consistent with nursing workflow.
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Multitasking by clinicians in the context of CPOE and CIS use.

TL;DR: This study expands the development and use of a taxonomy to characterize distractions to clinicians and their subsequent actions in the context of CPOE/CIS use to suggest that CPOe may necessitate different forms of safety nets than traditional clinician communication.
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‘Televaluation’ of clinical information systems: an integrative approach to assessing Web-based systems

TL;DR: A framework is presented for conducting evaluations of health-care information technologies that integrates a number of methods, ranging from deployment of on-line questionnaires (and Web-based forms) to remote video-based usability testing of user interactions with clinical information systems.
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Automatic knowledge acquisition from MEDLINE

TL;DR: This work proposes a procedure for obtaining medical knowledge via automated analysis of citations found in the National Library of Medicine's MEDLINE database, using a set of 504 pattern-matching rules to produce 2,795 facts.
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What do patients do with access to their medical records

TL;DR: The Patient Clinical Information System (PatCIS) was created to interface with the clinical data repository at New York Presbyterian Hospital to allow patients to add to and review their medical data and both patients and their physicians believed that use of the system enhanced the patients' understanding of their conditions and improved their communication with their physicians.