Search Articles

View query in Help articles search

Search Results (1 to 10 of 894 Results)

Download search results: CSV END BibTex RIS


Co-Designing a Collaborative Chronic Care Network (C3N) for Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Development of Methods

Co-Designing a Collaborative Chronic Care Network (C3N) for Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Development of Methods

Mentoring in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) clinic Leadership training Privacy education Facebook connector app and community building Branding Improve Care Now as a collaborative chronic care network (C3 N) Model care or quality improvement metric explorer Android device—gateway to C3 N Virtual camp oasis Self-management support curriculum Open-source practice Wiki Patient driven n=1 trial Restructured IBD education day Patient interface—virtual C3 N Our codesign process resulted in a community of over 100 people

Michael Seid, George Dellal, Laura E Peterson, Lloyd Provost, Peter A Gloor, David Livingstone Fore, Peter A Margolis

JMIR Hum Factors 2018;5(1):e8

Speed and Accuracy of a Point of Care Web-Based Knowledge Resource for Clinicians: A Controlled Crossover Trial

Speed and Accuracy of a Point of Care Web-Based Knowledge Resource for Clinicians: A Controlled Crossover Trial

Yes / No We sent an email to all clinicians (practicing physicians, physicians in training, senior medical students, physician assistants, and nurse practitioners) who had used Ask Mayo Expert at least once (N=1474), inviting them to attend a noon study session to evaluate Ask Mayo Expert. There were two date options in Rochester and one at each other site. Those who were willing to participate and available at the required time came to one of the five face-to-face sessions.

David A A Cook, Felicity Enders, Jane A Linderbaum, Dale Zwart, Farrell J Lloyd

Interact J Med Res 2014;3(1):e7

Electronic Health Record Portal Messages and Interactive Voice Response Calls to Improve Rates of Early Season Influenza Vaccination: Randomized Controlled Trial

Electronic Health Record Portal Messages and Interactive Voice Response Calls to Improve Rates of Early Season Influenza Vaccination: Randomized Controlled Trial

Using a computer-generated randomization table, we assigned all active portal users to receive either a portal message promoting influenza vaccination, listing upcoming clinics, and offering online scheduling of vaccination appointments (n=19,506) or usual care with no portal message (n=19,505). Separately, we randomized all portal nonusers to receive either an interactive voice response call (n=15,000) or usual care with no interactive voice response call (n=43,596) (Figure 1).

Jessica G Wijesundara, Mayuko Ito Fukunaga, Jessica Ogarek, Bruce Barton, Lloyd Fisher, Peggy Preusse, Devi Sundaresan, Lawrence Garber, Kathleen M Mazor, Sarah L Cutrona

J Med Internet Res 2020;22(9):e16373

Cookie Consent

We use our own cookies and third-party cookies so that we can show you this website and better understand how you use it, with a view to improving the services we offer. If you continue browsing, we consider that you have accepted the cookies.