Blackford Middleton
Harvard University
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Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association | 2003
David W. Bates; Gilad J. Kuperman; Samuel J. Wang; Tejal K. Gandhi; Lynn A. Volk; Cynthia D. Spurr; Ramin Khorasani; Milenko J. Tanasijevic; Blackford Middleton
While evidence-based medicine has increasingly broad-based support in health care, it remains difficult to get physicians to actually practice it. Across most domains in medicine, practice has lagged behind knowledge by at least several years. The authors believe that the key tools for closing this gap will be information systems that provide decision support to users at the time they make decisions, which should result in improved quality of care. Furthermore, providers make many errors, and clinical decision support can be useful for finding and preventing such errors. Over the last eight years the authors have implemented and studied the impact of decision support across a broad array of domains and have found a number of common elements important to success. The goal of this report is to discuss these lessons learned in the interest of informing the efforts of others working to make the practice of evidence-based medicine a reality.
The American Journal of Medicine | 2003
Samuel J. Wang; Blackford Middleton; Lisa A. Prosser; Christiana G. Bardon; Cynthia D. Spurr; Patricia J. Carchidi; Robert C. Goldszer; David G. Fairchild; Andrew J. Sussman; Gilad J. Kuperman; David W. Bates
Electronic medical record systems improve the quality of patient care and decrease medical errors, but their financial effects have not been as well documented. The purpose of this study was to estimate the net financial benefit or cost of implementing electronic medical record systems in primary care. We performed a cost-benefit study to analyze the financial effects of electronic medical record systems in ambulatory primary care settings from the perspective of the health care organization. Data were obtained from studies at our institution and from the published literature. The reference strategy for comparisons was the traditional paper-based medical record. The primary outcome measure was the net financial benefit or cost per primary care physician for a 5-year period. The estimated net benefit from using an electronic medical record for a 5-year period was 86,400 US dollars per provider. Benefits accrue primarily from savings in drug expenditures, improved utilization of radiology tests, better capture of charges, and decreased billing errors. In one-way sensitivity analyses, the model was most sensitive to the proportion of patients whose care was capitated; the net benefit varied from a low of 8400 US dollars to a high of 140,100 US dollars . A five-way sensitivity analysis with the most pessimistic and optimistic assumptions showed results ranging from a 2300 US dollars net cost to a 330,900 US dollars net benefit. Implementation of an electronic medical record system in primary care can result in a positive financial return on investment to the health care organization. The magnitude of the return is sensitive to several key factors.
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association | 2007
Jerome A. Osheroff; Jonathan M. Teich; Blackford Middleton; Elaine B. Steen; Adam Wright; Don E. Detmer
This document comprises an AMIA Board of Directors approved White Paper that presents a roadmap for national action on clinical decision support. It is published in JAMIA for archival and dissemination purposes. The full text of this material has been previously published on the AMIA Web site (www.amia.org/inside/initiatives/cds). AMIA is the copyright holder.
Journal of Biomedical Informatics | 2008
Dean F. Sittig; Adam Wright; Jerome A. Osheroff; Blackford Middleton; Jonathan M. Teich; Joan S. Ash; Emily M. Campbell; David W. Bates
There is a pressing need for high-quality, effective means of designing, developing, presenting, implementing, evaluating, and maintaining all types of clinical decision support capabilities for clinicians, patients and consumers. Using an iterative, consensus-building process we identified a rank-ordered list of the top 10 grand challenges in clinical decision support. This list was created to educate and inspire researchers, developers, funders, and policy-makers. The list of challenges in order of importance that they be solved if patients and organizations are to begin realizing the fullest benefits possible of these systems consists of: improve the human-computer interface; disseminate best practices in CDS design, development, and implementation; summarize patient-level information; prioritize and filter recommendations to the user; create an architecture for sharing executable CDS modules and services; combine recommendations for patients with co-morbidities; prioritize CDS content development and implementation; create internet-accessible clinical decision support repositories; use freetext information to drive clinical decision support; mine large clinical databases to create new CDS. Identification of solutions to these challenges is critical if clinical decision support is to achieve its potential and improve the quality, safety and efficiency of healthcare.
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association | 2008
David C. Kaelber; Ashish K. Jha; Douglas Johnston; Blackford Middleton; David W. Bates
Patients, policymakers, providers, payers, employers, and others have increasing interest in using personal health records (PHRs) to improve healthcare costs, quality, and efficiency. While organizations now invest millions of dollars in PHRs, the best PHR architectures, value propositions, and descriptions are not universally agreed upon. Despite widespread interest and activity, little PHR research has been done to date, and targeted research investment in PHRs appears inadequate. The authors reviewed the existing PHR specific literature (100 articles) and divided the articles into seven categories, of which four in particular--evaluation of PHR functions, adoption and attitudes of healthcare providers and patients towards PHRs, PHR related privacy and security, and PHR architecture--present important research opportunities. We also briefly discuss other research related to PHRs, PHR research funding sources, and PHR business models. We believe that additional PHR research can increase the likelihood that future PHR system deployments will beneficially impact healthcare costs, quality, and efficiency.
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association | 2013
Blackford Middleton; Meryl Bloomrosen; Mark A. Dente; Bill Hashmat; Ross Koppel; J. Marc Overhage; Thomas H. Payne; S. Trent Rosenbloom; Charlotte A. Weaver; Jiajie Zhang
In response to mounting evidence that use of electronic medical record systems may cause unintended consequences, and even patient harm, the AMIA Board of Directors convened a Task Force on Usability to examine evidence from the literature and make recommendations. This task force was composed of representatives from both academic settings and vendors of electronic health record (EHR) systems. After a careful review of the literature and of vendor experiences with EHR design and implementation, the task force developed 10 recommendations in four areas: (1) human factors health information technology (IT) research, (2) health IT policy, (3) industry recommendations, and (4) recommendations for the clinician end-user of EHR software. These AMIA recommendations are intended to stimulate informed debate, provide a plan to increase understanding of the impact of usability on the effective use of health IT, and lead to safer and higher quality care with the adoption of useful and usable EHR systems.
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association | 2006
Rainu Kaushal; Ashish K. Jha; Calvin Franz; Glaser J; Kanaka D. Shetty; Tonushree Jaggi; Blackford Middleton; Gilad J. Kuperman; Ramin Khorasani; Milenko J. Tanasijevic; David W. Bates
OBJECTIVE Although computerized physician order entry (CPOE) may decrease errors and improve quality, hospital adoption has been slow. The high costs and limited data on financial benefits of CPOE systems are a major barrier to adoption. The authors assessed the costs and financial benefits of the CPOE system at Brigham and Womens Hospital over ten years. DESIGN Cost and benefit estimates of a hospital CPOE system at Brigham and Womens Hospital (BWH), a 720-adult bed, tertiary care, academic hospital in Boston. MEASUREMENTS Institutional experts provided data about the costs of the CPOE system. Benefits were determined from published studies of the BWH CPOE system, interviews with hospital experts, and relevant internal documents. Net overall savings to the institution and operating budget savings were determined. All data are presented as value figures represented in 2002 dollars. RESULTS Between 1993 and 2002, the BWH spent
uncertainty in artificial intelligence | 1994
Malcolm Pradhan; Gregory M. Provan; Blackford Middleton; Max Henrion
11.8 million to develop, implement, and operate CPOE. Over ten years, the system saved BWH
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association | 2004
William A. Yasnoff; Betsy L. Humphreys; J. Marc Overhage; Don E. Detmer; Patricia Flatley Brennan; Richard Morris; Blackford Middleton; David W. Bates; John P. Fanning
28.5 million for cumulative net savings of
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association | 2004
Blackford Middleton; W. Ed Hammond; Patricia Flatley Brennan; Gregory F. Cooper
16.7 million and net operating budget savings of