Health eHearts Physician Survey
This is a questionnaire designed to be completed by nurses and physicians in an ambulatory setting. The tool includes questions to assess user's perceptions of electronic health records.
This is a questionnaire designed to be completed by nurses and physicians in an ambulatory setting. The tool includes questions to assess user's perceptions of electronic health records.
This is a questionnaire designed to be completed by administrators in an ambulatory setting. The tool includes questions to assess the current state of electronic health records.
This project evaluated a bilingual touchscreen educational program about breastfeeding and found improvements in breastfeeding knowledge, self-efficacy, and intent to breastfeed.
This project evaluated the impact of an inpatient portal used by cardiac patients and found that patients using the portal had a lower 30-day hospital readmission rate.
This project examined the concept of geographical area that is fundamental to health information exchange activity, and explored the practical and policy implications of how exchange service areas are defined and measured.
This project assessed the impact of a vaccine information exchange that linked an immunization information system (IIS) to an electronic health record (EHR) and found improvements in under- and over-immunization and immunization record completeness.
This study found human papillomavirus vaccine series completion rates in a low-income Latino adolescent population were high for patients receiving text messages reminders.
This is a questionnaire designed to be completed by clinical staff in an ambulatory setting. The tool includes questions to assess perception of electronic health records.
This is a questionnaire designed to be completed by physicians in an ambulatory setting. The tool includes questions to assess the current state of electronic health records.
This project compared the risk of orders placed on the wrong electronic patient record when providers were limited to having one patient record open at a time versus up to four and found no difference in errors between the two.