
Clinical Decision Support
The Road to Broad Adoption
Robert Greenes(Editor)
Academic Press
2nd Edition
Published on 30. October 2018
Book
Paperback/Softback
930 pages
978-0-12-810024-0 (ISBN)
The article will not be published
Description
With at least 40% new or updated content since the last edition, Clinical Decision Support, 2nd Edition explores the crucial new motivating factors poised to accelerate Clinical Decision Support (CDS) adoption. This book is mostly focused on the US perspective because of initiatives driving EHR adoption, the articulation of 'meaningful use', and new policy attention in process including the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) and the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). A few chapters focus on the broader international perspective. Clinical Decision Support, 2nd Edition explores the technology, sources of knowledge, evolution of successful forms of CDS, and organizational and policy perspectives surrounding CDS.
Exploring a roadmap for CDS, with all its efficacy benefits including reduced errors, improved quality, and cost savings, as well as the still substantial roadblocks needed to be overcome by policy-makers, clinicians, and clinical informatics experts, the field is poised anew on the brink of broad adoption. Clinical Decision Support, 2nd Edition provides an updated and pragmatic view of the methodological processes and implementation considerations. This book also considers advanced technologies and architectures, standards, and cooperative activities needed on a societal basis for truly large-scale adoption.
Exploring a roadmap for CDS, with all its efficacy benefits including reduced errors, improved quality, and cost savings, as well as the still substantial roadblocks needed to be overcome by policy-makers, clinicians, and clinical informatics experts, the field is poised anew on the brink of broad adoption. Clinical Decision Support, 2nd Edition provides an updated and pragmatic view of the methodological processes and implementation considerations. This book also considers advanced technologies and architectures, standards, and cooperative activities needed on a societal basis for truly large-scale adoption.
More details
Edition
2nd edition
Language
English
Place of publication
San Diego
United States
Publishing group
Elsevier Science Publishing Co Inc
Target group
College/higher education
Health care professionals, medical informatics researchers and students, policy makers, IT development managers, and various clinical investigators
Illustrations
Approx. 150 illustrations (50 in full color)
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 191 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-12-810024-0 (9780128100240)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
New editions

Robert Greenes | Guilherme Del Fiol
Clinical Decision Support and Beyond
Progress and Opportunities in Knowledge-Enhanced Health and Healthcare
Book
02/2023
3rd Edition
Academic Press
€138.50
Shipment within 15-20 days
Additional editions

Book
06/2014
2nd Edition
Academic Press
€121.32
Shipment within 15-20 days
Previous edition

Book
12/2006
Academic Press
€137.99
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Person
Robert Greenes, MD, PhD, holds an MD and a PhD in Computer Science from Harvard. Dr Greenes is an expert in health care information technology/informatics and has made contributions to the field over many years, initially at Harvard and more recently at Arizona State University in partnership with Mayo Clinic. His passion is the use of information technology in health care to make "the right thing the easy thing to do". He is Ira A. Fulton Chair of Biomedical Informatics at the ASU, ?a member of the National Academy of Medicine and of the International Academy of Health Sciences Informatics, and a Fellow of the American College of Radiology, American College of Medical Informatics, and the Society for Imaging Informatics in Medicine.? He was the 2008 recipient of the Morris F. Collen Award for lifetime impact on the field of biomedical informatics, from the American College of Medical Informatics.
Editor
Emeritus Professor of Biomedical Informatics, Arizona State University, Phoenix, AZ, United States
Content
SECTION I: COMPUTER-BASED CLINICAL DECISION SUPPORT: OVERVIEW, STATUS, AND CHALLENGES
1: Definition, Scope, and Challenges
2: A Brief History of Clinical Decision Support
3: Features of Computer-Based Clinical Decision Support
4: The Role of Quality Measurement and Reporting Feedback as a Driver for Care Improvement
SECTION II: EXPERIENCE WITH CDS DEVELOPMENT AND ADOPTION: CASE STUDIES, NATIONAL INITIATIVES, AND LESSONS LEARNED
5: Regenstrief Medical Informatics
6: Patients, Doctors, and Information Technology Clinical Decision Support at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Partners HealthCare
7: Computer-Based Approaches to Improving Healthcare Quality and Safety at LDS Hospital
8: International Dimensions of Clinical Decision Support
9: Current State of CDS Utilization
SECTION III: SOURCES OF KNOWLEDGE FOR CLINICAL DECISION SUPPORT
10: Human-Intensive Techniques
11: Generation of Knowledge for Clinical Decision Support
12: Modernizing Evidence Synthesis for Evidence-Based Medicine
13: Big Data and Population-Based Decision Support
14: Clinical Decision Support for Personalized Medicine
SECTION IV: THE TECHNOLOGY OF CLINICAL DECISION SUPPORT
15: Decision Rules and Expressions
16: Guidelines and Workflow Models
17: Ontologies, Vocabularies, and Data Models
18: Grouped Knowledge Elements
19: Infobuttons and Point of Care Access to Knowledge
20: Formal Representations and Semantic Web Technologies
21: The Role of Standards
SECTION V: ADOPTION OF CLINICAL DECISION SUPPORT
22: Cognitive Considerations for Health Information Technology
23: Organizational and Cultural Change
24: Managing the Investment in Clinical Decision Support
25: A Clinical Decision Support Implementation Guide: Practical Considerations
26: Legal and Regulatory Issues Related to the Use of Clinical Software in Health Care Delivery
27: Consumers and Clinical Decision Support
SECTION VI: THE JOURNEY TO WIDESPREAD USE OF CLINICAL DECISION SUPPORT
28: A Clinical Knowledge Management Program
29: Integration of Knowledge Resources into Applications to Enable CDS
30: Looking Ahead: The Road to Broad Adoption
1: Definition, Scope, and Challenges
2: A Brief History of Clinical Decision Support
3: Features of Computer-Based Clinical Decision Support
4: The Role of Quality Measurement and Reporting Feedback as a Driver for Care Improvement
SECTION II: EXPERIENCE WITH CDS DEVELOPMENT AND ADOPTION: CASE STUDIES, NATIONAL INITIATIVES, AND LESSONS LEARNED
5: Regenstrief Medical Informatics
6: Patients, Doctors, and Information Technology Clinical Decision Support at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Partners HealthCare
7: Computer-Based Approaches to Improving Healthcare Quality and Safety at LDS Hospital
8: International Dimensions of Clinical Decision Support
9: Current State of CDS Utilization
SECTION III: SOURCES OF KNOWLEDGE FOR CLINICAL DECISION SUPPORT
10: Human-Intensive Techniques
11: Generation of Knowledge for Clinical Decision Support
12: Modernizing Evidence Synthesis for Evidence-Based Medicine
13: Big Data and Population-Based Decision Support
14: Clinical Decision Support for Personalized Medicine
SECTION IV: THE TECHNOLOGY OF CLINICAL DECISION SUPPORT
15: Decision Rules and Expressions
16: Guidelines and Workflow Models
17: Ontologies, Vocabularies, and Data Models
18: Grouped Knowledge Elements
19: Infobuttons and Point of Care Access to Knowledge
20: Formal Representations and Semantic Web Technologies
21: The Role of Standards
SECTION V: ADOPTION OF CLINICAL DECISION SUPPORT
22: Cognitive Considerations for Health Information Technology
23: Organizational and Cultural Change
24: Managing the Investment in Clinical Decision Support
25: A Clinical Decision Support Implementation Guide: Practical Considerations
26: Legal and Regulatory Issues Related to the Use of Clinical Software in Health Care Delivery
27: Consumers and Clinical Decision Support
SECTION VI: THE JOURNEY TO WIDESPREAD USE OF CLINICAL DECISION SUPPORT
28: A Clinical Knowledge Management Program
29: Integration of Knowledge Resources into Applications to Enable CDS
30: Looking Ahead: The Road to Broad Adoption