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Timothy R. Huerta

Researcher at Ohio State University

Publications -  119
Citations -  2267

Timothy R. Huerta is an academic researcher from Ohio State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Patient portal. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 114 publications receiving 1718 citations. Previous affiliations of Timothy R. Huerta include Texas Tech University & University of Florida.

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Resistance is futile: but it is slowing the pace of EHR adoption nonetheless.

TL;DR: The external forces driving EHR diffusion have grown in importance since 2004 relative to physicians' internal motivation to adopt such systems, and the physicians' resistance to adoption has increased during the second period.
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Exploring the Digital Divide: Age and Race Disparities in Use of an Inpatient Portal.

TL;DR: Lower use of the inpatient portal is identified among African American and older patients, relative to White and younger patients, respectively, suggesting that the availability of the technology alone may be insufficient to overcome barriers to use and that additional intervention may be needed to close the digital divide.
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Personal Health Record Use in the United States: Forecasting Future Adoption Levels.

TL;DR: The PHR products available as of 2014 are likely to meet and exceed meaningful use stage 3 targets before 2020 without any incentive, and more ambitious uptake and functionality availability should be incorporated into future goals.
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Knowledge transfer & exchange through social networks: building foundations for a community of practice within tobacco control.

TL;DR: Data illustrating both the shape and size of the WATI network as well as member's interests and commitment to KTE, when shared and used to frame action steps, can positively influence the motivation to collaborate and create communities of practice.
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Forecasting the Maturation of Electronic Health Record Functions Among US Hospitals: Retrospective Analysis and Predictive Model.

TL;DR: It is indicated that US hospitals are decades away from fully implementing sophisticated decision support applications and interoperability functionalities in electronic health records as defined by EMRAM’s Stage 7, absent major policy changes or leaps in technological capabilities.