Using Electronic Patient-Reported Outcomes to Monitor Patients Between Visits: Tools and Lessons Across Four Medical Conditions.
Robert S. RudinGita ModyDaniel SolomonRuth Masterson CreberAdriana ArciaPublished in: AMIA (2022)
Keyphrases
- medical practice
- medical knowledge
- medical center
- medical experts
- medical data
- patient outcomes
- medical treatment
- primary care
- electronic patient record
- medical doctors
- health care
- clinical data
- medical records
- intensive care units
- patient records
- clinical decision making
- health related
- patient groups
- medical care
- patient care
- monitoring system
- medical staff
- patient data
- vital signs
- intensive care
- medical practitioners
- health information systems
- health care professionals
- medical diagnosis
- clinical practice
- medical devices
- therapy planning
- diabetic patients
- heart disease
- critical care
- cardiovascular disease
- clinical trials
- medical information
- clinical decision support systems
- medical decision making
- medical domain
- clinical information
- clinical guidelines
- operating room
- discharge summaries
- health records
- electronic health records
- clinical decision support
- breast cancer patients
- home care
- chronic disease
- diabetes mellitus
- emergency department
- intensive care unit
- health care services
- early diagnosis
- older adults
- intraoperative
- spinal cord injury
- health monitoring
- care delivery
- neurological disorders
- surgical procedures
- liver disease
- medical images
- electronic medical record
- hospital information systems
- patient monitoring
- high risk