J
Julia Adler-Milstein
Researcher at University of California, San Francisco
Publications - 204
Citations - 6983
Julia Adler-Milstein is an academic researcher from University of California, San Francisco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Health information exchange. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 165 publications receiving 5631 citations. Previous affiliations of Julia Adler-Milstein include Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center & Partners HealthCare.
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Journal Article
The value of health care information exchange and interoperability: The authors respond (3/16/2005)
TL;DR: In this paper, the value of electronic health care information exchange and interoperability (HIEI) between providers (hospitals and medical group practices) and independent laboratories, radiology centers, pharmacies, payers, public health departments, and other providers.
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The value of health care information exchange and interoperability.
Jan Walker,Eric C. Pan,Douglas R. Johnston,Julia Adler-Milstein,David W. Bates,Blackford Middleton +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the value of electronic health care information exchange and interoperability (HIEI) between providers and independent laboratories, radiology centers, pharmacies, payers, public health departments, and other providers is assessed.
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Electronic health record adoption in US hospitals: the emergence of a digital "advanced use" divide.
Julia Adler-Milstein,A Jay Holmgren,Peter D. Kralovec,Chantal Worzala,Talisha Searcy,Vaishali Patel +5 more
TL;DR: Hospital EHR adoption is widespread and many hospitals are using EHRs to support performance measurement and patient engagement, however, this is not happening across all hospitals, and a digital divide appears to be emerging.
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Despite Substantial Progress In EHR Adoption, Health Information Exchange And Patient Engagement Remain Low In Office Settings
Michael F. Furukawa,Jennifer King,Vaishali Patel,Chun Ju Hsiao,Julia Adler-Milstein,Ashish K. Jha +5 more
TL;DR: It was found that 30 percent of physicians routinely used capabilities for secure messaging with patients, and 24 percent routinely provided patients with the ability to view online, download, or transmit their health record.
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HITECH Act Drove Large Gains In Hospital Electronic Health Record Adoption
TL;DR: The results support the argument that recent gains in EHR adoption can be attributed specifically to HITECH, which suggests that the act could serve as a model for ways to drive the adoption of other valuable technologies.