Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Dante Morra is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Dante Morra.


Journal of Medical Internet Research | 2009

A Survey of Health-Related Activities on Second Life

Leslie Beard; Kumanan Wilson; Dante Morra; Jennifer Keelan

Background Increasingly, governments, health care agencies, companies, and private groups have chosen Second Life as part of their Web 2.0 communication strategies. Second Life offers unique design features for disseminating health information, training health professionals, and enabling patient education for both academic and commercial health behavior research. Objectives This study aimed to survey and categorize the range of health-related activities on Second Life; to examine the design attributes of the most innovative and popular sites; and to assess the potential utility of Second Life for the dissemination of health information and for health behavior change. Methods We used three separate search strategies to identify health-related sites on Second Life. The first used the application’s search engine, entering both generic and select illness-specific keywords, to seek out sites. The second identified sites through a comprehensive review of print, blog, and media sources discussing health activities on Second Life. We then visited each site and used a snowball method to identify other health sites until we reached saturation (no new health sites were identified). The content, user experience, and chief purpose of each site were tabulated as well as basic site information, including user traffic data and site size. Results We found a wide range of health-related activities on Second Life, and a diverse group of users, including organizations, groups, and individuals. For many users, Second Life activities are a part of their Web 2.0 communication strategy. The most common type of health-related site in our sample (n = 68) were those whose principle aim was patient education or to increase awareness about health issues. The second most common type of site were support sites, followed by training sites, and marketing sites. Finally, a few sites were purpose-built to conduct research in SL or to recruit participants for real-life research. Conclusions Studies show that behaviors from virtual worlds can translate to the real world. Our survey suggests that users are engaged in a range of health-related activities in Second Life which are potentially impacting real-life behaviors. Further research evaluating the impact of health-related activities on Second Life is warranted.


Health Affairs | 2009

What Does It Cost Physician Practices to Interact with Health Insurance Plans

Lawrence P. Casalino; Sean Nicholson; David N. Gans; Terry Hammons; Dante Morra; Theodore Karrison; Wendy Levinson

Physicians have long expressed dissatisfaction with the time they and their staffs spend interacting with health plans. However, little information exists about the extent of these interactions. We conducted a national survey on this subject of physicians and practice administrators. Physicians reported spending three hours weekly interacting with plans; nursing and clerical staff spent much larger amounts of time. When time is converted to dollars, we estimate that the national time cost to practices of interactions with plans is at least


International Journal of Medical Informatics | 2012

Effects of clinical communication interventions in hospitals: a systematic review of information and communication technology adoptions for improved communication between clinicians.

Robert Wu; Kim Tran; Vivian Lo; Kevin J. O’Leary; Dante Morra; Sherman D. Quan; Laure Perrier

23 billion to


Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association | 2012

The challenges in making electronic health records accessible to patients

Leslie Beard; Rebecca Schein; Dante Morra; Kumanan Wilson; Jennifer Keelan

31 billion each year.


Health Affairs | 2011

US Physician Practices Versus Canadians: Spending Nearly Four Times As Much Money Interacting With Payers

Dante Morra; Sean Nicholson; Wendy Levinson; David N. Gans; Terry Hammons; Lawrence P. Casalino

OBJECTIVE To conduct a systematic review of the literature to identify, describe and assess interventions of information and communication technology on the processes of communication and associated patient outcomes within hospital settings. MATERIALS AND METHODS Studies published from the years 1996 to 2010 were considered and were selected if they described an evaluation of information and communication technology interventions to improve clinical communication within hospitals. Two authors abstracted data from full text articles, and the quality of individual articles were appraised. Results of interventions were summarized by their effect. RESULTS There were 18 identified studies that evaluated the use of interventions that included alphanumeric paging, hands-free communication devices, mobile phones, smartphones, task management systems and a display based paging system. Most quantitative studies used a before and after study design and were of lower quality. Of all the studies, there was only one prospective randomized study, but this study used only simulated communication events. Quantitative studies identified improved perceptions of communication and some improvement in communication metrics. Qualitative studies described improvements in efficiency of communication but also issues of loss of control and reliability. CONCLUSIONS Despite the rapid advancement in information and communications technology over the last decade, there is limited evidence suggesting improvements in the ability of health professionals to communicate effectively. Given the critical nature of communication, we advocate further evaluation of information and communication technology designed to improve communication between clinicians. Outcome measures should include measures of patient-oriented outcomes and efficiency for clinicians.


JAMA | 2014

Effect of a Postdischarge Virtual Ward on Readmission or Death for High-Risk Patients: A Randomized Clinical Trial

Irfan A. Dhalla; Tara O’Brien; Dante Morra; Kevin E. Thorpe; Brian M. Wong; Rajin Mehta; David W. Frost; Howard Abrams; Françoise Ko; Patrick Van Rooyen; Chaim M. Bell; Andrea Gruneir; Geraint Lewis; Stacey Daub; Geoff Anderson; Gillian Hawker; Paula A. Rochon; Andreas Laupacis

It is becoming increasingly apparent that there is a tension between growing consumer demands for access to information and a healthcare system that may not be prepared to meet these demands. Designing an effective solution for this problem will require a thorough understanding of the barriers that now stand in the way of giving patients electronic access to their health data. This paper reviews the following challenges related to the sharing of electronic health records: cost and security concerns, problems in assigning responsibilities and rights among the various players, liability issues and tensions between flexible access to data and flexible access to physicians.


Value in Health | 2012

A Review of the Cost of Atrial Fibrillation

Walter P. Wodchis; R. Sacha Bhatia; Kori Leblanc; Nazanin Meshkat; Dante Morra

Physician practices, especially the small practices with just one or two physicians that are common in the United States, incur substantial costs in time and labor interacting with multiple insurance plans about claims, coverage, and billing for patient care and prescription drugs. We surveyed physicians and administrators in the province of Ontario, Canada, about time spent interacting with payers and compared the results with a national companion survey in the United States. We estimated physician practices in Ontario spent


Journal of Interprofessional Care | 2012

The use of smartphones in general and internal medicine units: A boon or a bane to the promotion of interprofessional collaboration?

Vivian Lo; Robert Wu; Dante Morra; Lydia Lee; Scott Reeves

22,205 per physician per year interacting with Canadas single-payer agency--just 27 percent of the


Journal of Medical Internet Research | 2014

Medical Students and Personal Smartphones in the Clinical Environment: The Impact on Confidentiality of Personal Health Information and Professionalism

Kim Tran; Dante Morra; Vivian Lo; Sherman D. Quan; Howard Abrams; Robert Wu

82,975 per physician per year spent in the United States. US nursing staff, including medical assistants, spent 20.6 hours per physician per week interacting with health plans--nearly ten times that of their Ontario counterparts. If US physicians had administrative costs similar to those of Ontario physicians, the total savings would be approximately


Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association | 2013

The intended and unintended consequences of communication systems on general internal medicine inpatient care delivery: a prospective observational case study of five teaching hospitals.

Robert Wu; Vivian Lo; Dante Morra; Brian M. Wong; Robert Sargeant; Ken Locke; Rodrigo B. Cavalcanti; Sherman D. Quan; Peter G. Rossos; Kim Tran; Mark Cheung

27.6 billion per year. The results support the opinion shared by many US health care leaders interviewed for this study that interactions between physician practices and health plans could be performed much more efficiently.

Collaboration


Dive into the Dante Morra's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert Wu

University Health Network

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Howard Abrams

University Health Network

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brian M. Wong

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hannah J. Wong

University Health Network

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sherman Quan

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Vivian Lo

University Health Network

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sherman D. Quan

University Health Network

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kori Leblanc

University Health Network

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Leslie Beard

Toronto General Hospital

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge