Review of (Roehr et al, 2017)
Personal Health Records in (Roehr et al, 2017): Templates and Technology Platforms
Personal Health Records in (Roehr et al, 2017): Structural and Semantic Standards
Personal Health Records in (Roehr et al, 2017): Standards
Personal Health Records in (Roehr et al, 2017): Data Types
(Roehr et al, 2017) on the Structure of Personal Health Records
(Roehr et al, 2017) on Personal Health Records: Overview
(Roehr et al, 2017) on Personal Health Records
Review of (Kierkegaard et al, 2014)
The Health Information Exchange: Summary of (Kierkegaard et al, 2014)
Usability in a Health Information Exchange in (Kierkegaard et al, 2014)
Search Confidence in a Health Information Exchange in (Kierkegaard et al, 2014)
Non-RHIO Related Exchange Mechanisms in (Kierkegaard et al, 2014)
Health Organisation Participation in a Health Information Exchange in (Kierkegaard et al, 2014)
Consent in the Health Information Exchange in (Kierkegaard et al, 2014)
Availability of Information in a Health Information Exchange in (Kierkegaard et al, 2014)
Frequency of Usage of a Health Information Exchange in (Kierkegaard et al, 2014)
Health Information Exchange Purpose of Usage in (Kierkegaard et al, 2014)
Health Information Exchange Themes From (Kierkegaard et al, 2014)
Investigating a Health Information Exchange Using a Qualitative Approach (Kierkegaard et al, 2014)
Review of (Vest et al, 2014)
Reflections On Health Information Exchange Use In (Vest et al, 2014)
Association Between Use of a Health Information Exchange and Hospital Admissions
The links below relate to the document ‘Information and Technology for Better Care’ which is a 5-year strategy published by NHS Digital. The link at the bottom of the list below is the introduction whereas successive ascending links relate to different sections of the paper. Finally the link immediately below is a summary of the document compiled from the previous posts.
Information and Technology for Better Care
Information and Technology for Better Care: Making Better Use of Health and Care Information
Information and Technology for Better Care: National Services to Meet Local Needs
Information and Technology for Better Care: Shared Architecture and Standards
Information and Technology for Better Care
The Standards for the Clinical Structure and Content of Patient Records is a document by NHS Digital. Below are links to posts on the various sections of the document and a reflection on the document.
Reflections on The Standards for the Clinical Structure and Content of Patient Records
The Standards for the Clinical Structure and Content of Patient Records: Core Clinical Headings
The Standards for the Clinical Structure and Content of Patient Records: Referral Headings
Standards for the Clinical Structure and Content of Patient Records: Outpatient Record Headings
Standards for the Clinical Structure and Content of Patient Records: Discharge Record Headings
Standards for the Clinical Structure and Content of Patient Records: Handover Record Headings
Standards for the Clinical Structure and Content of Patient Records: Admission Headers
Standards for the Clinical Structure and Content of Patient Records: All Record Headings
Standards for the Clinical Structure and Content of Patient Records
The National Information Board’s ‘Personalised Health and Care 2020’ document is reviewed in the posts linked to below. The top most link is the summary of the previous posts.
Personalised Health and Care 2020: A Summary
Personalised Health and Care 2020: Making it Happen
Personalised Health and Care 2020: Increasing Value
Personalised Health and Care 2020: Supporting Professionals to Make Use of Data and Technology
Personalised Health and Care 2020: Supporting Innovation and Growth
Personalised Health and Care 2020: Information Governance
Personalised Health and Care 2020: Transparency
Personalised Health and Care 2020: Enabling the Right Choices
Personalised Health and Care 2020: Change
Personalised Health and Care 2020: Current State
Personalised Health and Care 2020: Evidence of Achievability
Personalised Health and Care 2020: Drivers for Action
The links below are to posts reviewing a paper on Patients’ Support for a Health Information Exchange. The top link is a summary of the previous posts.
Patients’ Support for Health Information Exchange: Summary
Patients’ Support for Health Information Exchange: Patient Preferences for Consent
Patients’ Support For Health Information Exchange: Types of Recipients
Patients’ Support For Health Information Exchange – Level of Patient Participation in HIE
Patients’ Support For Health Information Exchange – Patient Characteristics
Patients’ Support For Health Information Exchange – Perceived Concerns
Patients’ Support For Health Information Exchange – Perceived Benefits
Patients’ Support for Health Information Exchange
Review of a paper by Holgrem et al, 2016
Reflections on (Holgrem et al, 2016):Odds Ratios as a Measure of Policy
Interoperability and Odds Ratios in (Holgrem et al, 2016) Part 2
Interoperability and Odds Ratios in (Holgrem et al, 2016)
What is the Odds Ratio? (Updated)
Hospital Engagement in the Four Domains of Interoperability
Hospital Engagement in the Four Domains of Interoperability
Engagement in Core Domains of Interoperability: Data Sources
Engagement in Core Domains of Interoperability: The ONC
Engagement in Core Domains of Interoperability: Electronic Health Record Comprehensiveness
Engagement in Core Domains of Interoperability
Matching Patient Records in a HIE
Matching Patient Records in a HIE
Review of a paper on barriers and facilitators of a Health Information Exchange
Summary of Eden et al’s Systematic Review
Organisation and Workflow in the Health Information Exchange in Eden et al’s Systematic Review
Completeness of Information in the Health Information Exchange in Eden et al’s Systematic Review
A Systematic Review on Barriers and Facilitators for a Health Information Exchange
The links below are to a review of a paper by Jawoon and a secondary analysis using the data in the paper.
Reflections on the Odds Ratio for the NCHS Data
Calculating Odds Ratios for EHR’s and Information Exchange in Jawoon et al’s Paper
NCHS Data Brief on Electronic Health Records and Electronic Information Sharing: Certified EHR’s
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