J
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.
Papers
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Journal Article
Development and representation of a fall-injury risk assessment instrument in a clinical information system.
TL;DR: An electronic fall and Injury risk assessment instrument is in development to address a hospital-based fall and injury prevention initiative.
Book ChapterDOI
Infobuttons and Point of Care Access to Knowledge
TL;DR: Work to develop infobutton managers is described that provide a flexible, generic method for integrating infobuttons with clinical systems, and a standard developed by Health Level Seven International (HL7) is described to enable a standards-based approach to implementing infOButtons.
Proceedings Article
Development of an ontology to model medical errors, information needs, and the clinical communication space.
Peter D. Stetson,Lawrence K. McKnight,Suzanne Bakken,Christine Curran,Tate T. Kubose,James J. Cimino +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed an ontology representing the intersection of medical errors, information needs and the communication space, and used this ontology to support the collection, storage and interpretation of project data.
Journal ArticleDOI
Opportunity for Genotype-Guided Prescribing Among Adult Patients in 11 US Health Systems.
J. Kevin Hicks,Nihal El Rouby,Nihal El Rouby,Henry H. Ong,Jonathan S. Schildcrout,Laura B. Ramsey,Yaping Shi,Leigh Anne Tang,Christina L. Aquilante,Amber L. Beitelshees,Kathryn V. Blake,James J. Cimino,Brittney H. Davis,Philip E. Empey,David P. Kao,Daniel L. Lemkin,Nita A. Limdi,Gloria Lipori,Marc B. Rosenman,Marc B. Rosenman,Todd C. Skaar,Evgenia Teal,Sony Tuteja,Laura K. Wiley,Helen Williams,Almut G. Winterstein,Sara L. Van Driest,Larisa H. Cavallari,Josh F. Peterson +28 more
TL;DR: The authors in this article found that a significant portion of adults treated at medical institutions across the United States is exposed to medications for which genetic information, if available, should be used to guide prescribing.