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  1. Kiosks
  2. Knowledge Representation
  3. Lab on a Chip
  4. Large language models
  5. Leading Examples of Biobanking
  6. Legal health record
  7. METEOR: An Enterprise Health Informatics Environment to Support Evidence - based Medicine
  8. Main Page/NEWSTEPS
  9. Main Page/Remote Monitoring of Implantable Cardioverter-Defibrillators : A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Clinical Outcomes
  10. Main content area The Role of Charity Care and Primary Care Physician Assignment on ED Use in Homeless Patients
  11. Marginal Gains
  12. Master Data Management in Health care
  13. Mathematical Tools for the Epidemiologist
  14. Meaningful Use of Electronic Health Records: Experiences from the Field and Future Opportunities
  15. Measure of Clinical Information Technology Adoption
  16. Measurement of Healthcare Information Technology Vendor Performance
  17. MedDRA
  18. MediaWiki Supporting Instructions
  19. Medical Device Integration
  20. Medical Robots
  21. Medical Scribe
  22. Medicare Dashboard
  23. Medicare advantage
  24. Medication safety alert tools
  25. Medinformatix
  26. MedlinePlus Connect
  27. Mining Electronic Health Record Data
  28. Mobile Health Implementation
  29. Mobile phone diabetes project led to improved glycemic control and net savings for Chicago plan participants
  30. Mobilizing Computable Biomedical Knowledge
  31. Multifactorial intervention in diabetes care using real-time monitoring and tailored feedback in type 2 diabetes
  32. Multiple open charts
  33. My name
  34. National Healthcare Policy
  35. Natural language processing and inference rules as strategies for updating problem list in an electronic health record
  36. NewSTEPs
  37. Note Bloat
  38. Number entry error
  39. Nurses' satisfaction with medication administration point-of-care technology
  40. Nursing informatics rev 2019
  41. Nursing medication administration and workflow using computerized physician order entry
  42. Nutrition informatics
  43. Obstetric Alarm Fatigue
  44. Obstetrical EMR
  45. Ontology driven decision support for the diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment
  46. Open Health Tools
  47. Open MedicDrive
  48. Organizational Behavior
  49. P4 Medicine
  50. Pandemic+Influences+on+Healthcare+Delivery+and+Information+Security+in+the+United+States
  51. Participation in EHR based simulation improves recognition of patient safety issues
  52. Patient-Care Questions that Physicians Are Unable to Answer
  53. PatientSecure
  54. Patient Decision Aids
  55. Patient Identification Errors
  56. Patient Safety: Improving Safety with Information Technology
  57. Patient Web Services Integrated with a Shared Medical Record: Patient Use and Satisfaction
  58. Patient empowerment
  59. Patient engagement framework
  60. Patient – Physician Collaboration on FHIR (Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources)
  61. Patients' safety, privacy and effectiveness--a conflict of interests in health care information systems?
  62. Pearl EMR
  63. Perceived Barriers and Facilitators of Using a Web-Based Interactive Decision Aid for Colorectal Cancer Screening in Community Practice Settings: Findings From Focus Groups With Primary Care Clinicians and Medical Office Staff
  64. Perceptions Regarding Electronic Health Record Implementation among Health Information Management Professionals in Alabama: A Statewide Survey and Analysis
  65. Perioperative Nurses' Attitudes Toward the Electronic Health Record
  66. Personal Indentifiable Information
  67. Personal health records: a randomized trial of effects on elder medication safety
  68. Perspectives on electronic medical record implementation after two years of use in primary health care practice
  69. Pharmacogenetics
  70. Pharmacovigilance using clinical notes
  71. Pharmacy Robotics
  72. PhenoTips
  73. Physician Perception of CDS
  74. Physician attitudes toward health information exchange: Results of a statewide survey
  75. Playing smallball: Approaches to evaluating pilot health information exchange systems (HIE)
  76. Population Based Estimates
  77. Potentially Inappropriate Medications for Older Adults: 65 and Older Based on Updated Beers Criteria
  78. Predicting the Adoption of Electronic Health Records by Physicians: When Will Health Care be Paperless?
  79. Predictive scheduling
  80. Problem List Automation
  81. Project Governance
  82. Provider Burnout
  83. Provider and pharmacist responses to warfarin drug–drug interaction alerts: a study of healthcare downstream of CPOE alerts
  84. Provider attributes
  85. QRDA
  86. Q methodology
  87. Qualitative evaluation of health information exchange efforts
  88. Quality Project Ambulatory E-Prescribing
  89. Quality Reporting Document Architecture
  90. RHIOs and Meaningful use
  91. RX 30
  92. Randomized clinical trial of a customized electronic alert requiring an affirmative response compared to a control group receiving a commercial passive CPOE alert: NSAID–warfarin co-prescribing as a test case
  93. Ransomware
  94. Rapid Assessment Process
  95. Rationale, design, and implementation protocol of an electronic health record integrated clinical prediction rule (iCPR) randomized trial in primary care
  96. Readiness Assessment
  97. Recommendations for Responsible Monitoring and Regulation of Clinical Software Systems
  98. Reducing diagnostic errors in primary care
  99. Reduction in Chemotherapy Order Errors With Computerized Physician Order Entry
  100. Reduction in Chemotherapy Order Errors With Computerized Physician Order Entry and Clinical Decision Support Systems
  101. Relationship between medication event rates and the Leapfrog computerized physician order entry evaluation tool
  102. Relaxation of Stark Rules Explained
  103. Release of Information
  104. Remote patient monitoring
  105. Replace
  106. Reports of Impact of EHRs on Opthalmology practices - A Sampling of the Literature
  107. Response to Medication Dosing Alerts for Pediatric Inpatients Using a Computerized Provider Order Entry System
  108. Results from simulated data sets: probabilistic record linkage outperforms deterministic record linkage
  109. Return on investment for a computerized physician order entry system.
  110. Review Of Nurse Experiences With Electronic Health Records
  111. Review of Certifications Available for Informatics and Health Information Management Professionals
  112. Review of Lessons Learned from Computerized Provider Order Entry Implementation in Community Hospitals: a Qualitative Study
  113. Reviewing the Benefits and Costs of Electronic Health Records and Associated Patient
  114. Rights and responsibilities of users of electronic health records
  115. Risk assessment
  116. Risks Benefits and Barriers of EHR Systems: A Comparative Study Based on Size of Hospital
  117. Role of Computerized Physician Order Entry Systems in Facilitating Medication Errors
  118. Role of a Change Leader in the CIS Implementation Process
  119. Routine Methods
  120. SMSMessaging
  121. SOAP note
  122. SPC in Healthcare
  123. Scribe
  124. Security Threat Posed by USB-Based Personal Health Records
  125. Security for Electronic Communication in Health Care
  126. Security in Electronic Communication in Health Care
  127. Security of Electronic Medical Information and Patient Privacy: What You Need to Know
  128. Self-assessment for practices considering electronic medical records
  129. Sentiment analysis in medical settings: New opportunities and challenges
  130. Setting up the Project Team
  131. Shared Decision-Making
  132. Shining a little light and a little heat on the issue of EHRs and fraud
  133. SigmaCare
  134. Single Sign-On
  135. Smart
  136. SmartCare
  137. Social engineering
  138. Software testing
  139. Sparklines
  140. Standardized nursing terminology
  141. Statistical Learning
  142. Stopping fraud.
  143. Structural approach to design user interface
  144. Summary of Findings from the RHIO Finance Survey
  145. Surface Computing
  146. Sustainable Medical Applications, Reusable Technologies (SMART)
  147. Symptom-checker tools
  148. Symptomat
  149. System Development Methodologies
  150. Systematic review of clinical decision support interventions with potential for inpatient cost reduction
  151. TELEMETRY
  152. Tab-separated file of Beers criteria alerts
  153. Taking It to the Streets: Recording Medical Outreach Data on Personal Digital Assistants
  154. Technology, work and information flow: Lessons from the implementation of a wireless alert pager system
  155. Technology Informatics Guiding Education Reform
  156. Tele-ICU in Rural Hospitals: The Need for More Research
  157. TelehealthEmergencyMedicine
  158. Telemedicine reimbursement
  159. Telerehabilitation
  160. Tethered EHR/Patient Portal for the Child and Adolescent Patient
  161. Text S P Rates Newcrest Mining Ltd BBB Outlook Stable Reuters 26
  162. TheNNT.com
  163. The Application of an Institutional Clinical Data Warehouse to the Assessment of Adverse Drug Reactions - Evalutation of Aminoglycoside and Cephalosporin Associated Nephrotoxicity
  164. The CMIO--A New Leader for Health Systems
  165. The E-Patient-Provider Relationship
  166. The Effects of Creating Psychological Ownership on Physicians' Acceptance of Clinical Information Systems
  167. The Extent and Importance of Unintended Consequences Related to Computerized Provider Order Entry
  168. The Impact of CPOE Medication Systems’ Design Aspects on Usability, Workflow and Medication Orders
  169. The Impact of Electronic Health Records on Time Efficiency of Physicians and Nurses: A Systematic Review
  170. The Impact of a Clinical Information System in an Intensive Care Unit
  171. The Impact of e-Prescribing on Prescriber and Staff Time in Ambulatory Care Clinics: A Time-Motion Study
  172. The Invisible Work of Personal Health Information Management Among People With Multiple Chronic Conditions: Qualitative Interview Study Among Patients and Providers
  173. The Maternal and Perinatal Quality Care Collaborative (MPQCC)
  174. The Role of Health Care Experience and Consumer Information Efficacy in Shaping Privacy and Security Perceptions of Medical Records: National Consumer Survey Results
  175. The SAGE guideline model
  176. The Value of Electronic Health Records in Solo or Small Group Practices
  177. The economic benefits of health information exchange interoperability for Australia
  178. The financial impact of health information exchange on emergency department care
  179. The impact of computerized provider order entry on medication errors in a multispecialty group practice
  180. The impact of computerized provider order entry systems on medical-imaging services: a systematic review
  181. The registry case finding engine: An automated tool to identify cancer cases from unstructured, free-text pathology reports and clinical notes
  182. The technology acceptance model: its past and its future in health care
  183. The unintended consequences of computerized provider order entry: Findings from a mixed methods exploration
  184. The utility of adding retrospective medication profiling to computerized provider order entry in an ambulatory care population
  185. The vulnerabilities of computerized physician order entry systems: a qualitative stud
  186. The wave has finally broken: now what
  187. Then and Now: Nurses' Perceptions of the Electronic Health Record
  188. Time-dependent Drug–Drug Interaction Alerts in Care Provider Order Entry: Software May Inhibit Medication Error Reductions
  189. TrEHRT
  190. Transitions of Care
  191. Translating Knowledge into Practice
  192. Trialome
  193. Understanding differences in electronic health record (EHR) use: linking individual physicians' perceptions of uncertainty and EHR use patterns in ambulatory care
  194. Understanding keys to successful implementation of electronic decision support in rural hospitals: analysis of a pilot study for antimicrobial prescribing
  195. Understanding physicians' behavior toward alerts about nephrotoxic medications in outpatients: a cross-sectional analysis
  196. United States renal data system
  197. Use of Mobile Clinical Decision Support Software by Junior Doctors at a UK Teaching Hospital: Identification and Evaluation of Barriers to Engagement
  198. Use of electronic medical records (EMR) for oncology outcomes research: assessing the comparability of EMR information to patient registry and health claims data
  199. Use of electronic medical records in oncology outcomes research
  200. Use of free text clinical records in identifying syndromes and analyzing health data
  201. User Interface Evaluation
  202. Uses for aggregated EHR coded data
  203. Utilizing IHE-based Electronic Health Record Systems for Secondary Use
  204. Vendor Selection Criteria: Research
  205. Vendor negotiations
  206. Virtual visitation
  207. Visual analytics
  208. Voluntary Universal Healthcare Identifier
  209. Wearables
  210. What may help or hinder the implementation of computerized decision support systems (CDSSs): a focus group study with physician
  211. Whole system measures
  212. Workaround
  213. “Clinical decision support systems”

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