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Information retrieval in medicine: The electronic medical record as a new domain

✍ Scribed by Catherine Arnott Smith


Book ID
102509340
Publisher
Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
208 KB
Volume
43
Category
Article
ISSN
0044-7870

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

“The medical record is a material form of public memory,” Berg (1996) writes, “a structured distributing and collecting device, where all tasks concerning a patient's trajectory must begin and end…;” [Italics original; p. 510]. Structured distributing and collecting devices are the natural interest of information science. Unfortunately, of the 130 articles published about medicine in almost 36 years of JASIST, although 70 (54%) deal with information retrieval, communication and the work processes behind them, only 2 of these articles (1.5%) have focused on the medical record.

The body of existing information retrieval work most relevant to the medical record as a base for experiment is the work called “passage retrieval” defined as “the task of identifying and extracting fragments from large, or short but heterogeneous full text documents” (Melucci, 1998, p. 44).

This paper presents a document‐centered approach to the EHR as an information retrieval problem. It is clear that passage retrieval researchers working in the field of information science have seen similar values in document passages as have researchers in medical informatics. Without either literature acknowledging the other, workers in both camps have identified the same potential in document structure, labels, specificity and explicit hierarchies of knowledge for signaling relevance to the reader. The National Health Information Infrastructure Initiative (http://aspe.hhs.gov/sp/nhii/) identifies academics and researchers as natural stakeholders, like clinicians and caregivers, in enabling better healthcare through better information sharing (National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics, 2003). Information science has much to contribute to the health information technology arena and to electronic health records in particular: their development, their maintenance, and most importantly their improvement to serve the needs of diverse users.


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