Browsing University of Missouri-Columbia by Thesis Advisor "Gong, Yang, Ph. D."
Now showing items 1-6 of 6
-
Designing a holistic prototype and evaluating the requirements of long-term care electronic health record
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 2012)Our research is aimed at exploring the design requirements of long-term care information system or electronic health record based on the needs of the care providers. It helped in evaluating the current status of long-term ... -
Developing a HIPAA compliant EMR system : TigerPlace case study
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 2012)The purpose of this project was to develop a secure and HIPAA-compliant EMR system in TigerPlace. Any information that is processed over the network or internet is exposed to various security threats. Malware infections ... -
Developing a model of psychiatric visit non-adherence
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 2010)Non-adherence to psychiatry visits costs the US mental health care system more than one hundred billion dollars annually. Non-adherent visits undermine improvements to patient care quality, erode patient well-being, and ... -
Implementation of a fuzzy rule-based decision support system for the immunohistochemical diagnosis of small B-cell lymphomas
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 2009)Integrating the massive amount of new genomic information into medical practice will require new approaches to knowledge management. This need is particularly acute in surgical pathology where the evaluation of diagnostic ... -
Reporting quality and system design concerns of voluntary medical incident reporting systems : a literature review [abstract]
(2010)Voluntary medical incident reporting system (VMIR) is the application of technology to support health professionals on medical errors reporting and to ultimately improve healthcare quality and patient safety. The underreporting ... -
Understanding intensive care unit clinical communication using knowledge representation
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 2011)Medical errors are a major cause of death among Americans, and clinical miscommunication is considered the leading cause of medical errors. The aim of this study was to analyze clinical communication behaviors and interruptions ...