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Jan Horsky

Researcher at Brigham and Women's Hospital

Publications -  43
Citations -  2303

Jan Horsky is an academic researcher from Brigham and Women's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Usability & Health information technology. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 37 publications receiving 2113 citations. Previous affiliations of Jan Horsky include Columbia University & Partners HealthCare.

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Guided medication dosing for inpatients with renal insufficiency.

TL;DR: Guided medication dosing for inpatients with renal insufficiency appears to result in improved dose and frequency choices, and demonstrates a way in which computer-based decision support systems can improve care.
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Resource Utilization of Patients With Hypochondriacal Health Anxiety and Somatization

TL;DR: Primary care patients who somatize and have high levels of health-related anxiety have considerably higher medical care utilization than nonsomatizers in the year before and after being assessed, which persists after adjusting for differences in sociodemographic characteristics and medical morbidity.
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Interface design principles for usable decision support

TL;DR: Suggestions outlined in this report may help clarify the goals of optimal CDS design but larger national initiatives are needed for systematic application of human factors in health information technology (HIT) development.
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Comprehensive Analysis of a Medication Dosing Error Related to CPOE

TL;DR: The authors characterized errors in several converging aspects of the drug ordering process: confusing on-screen laboratory results review, system usability difficulties, user training problems, and suboptimal clinical system safeguards that all contributed to a serious dosing error.
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A framework for analyzing the cognitive complexity of computer-assisted clinical ordering

TL;DR: A multifaceted cognitive methodology for the characterization of cognitive demands of a medical information system is presented, revealing that the configuration of resources in this ordering application placed unnecessarily heavy cognitive demands on the user, especially on those who lacked a robust conceptual model of the system.