scholarly journals Digitization of Measurement Based Care Pathways in Mental Health through REDCap and Electronic Health Record Integration: Development and Usability Study (Preprint)

Author(s):  
Steve Hawley ◽  
Joanna Yu ◽  
Nikola Bogetic ◽  
Natalia Potapova ◽  
Chris Wakefield ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Niarchou ◽  
George Lin ◽  
Miriam D. Lense ◽  
Reyna Gordon ◽  
Lea Davis

AbstractBackgroundA limited set of previous studies suggest musicians may be at higher risk for a unique set of medical and mental health problems. To address the limitations of previous studies, we examined trends in the medical care of musicians in Vanderbilt’s Electronic Health Record research database.MethodsWe mined clinical notes for a principled collection of keywords and regular expressions which indicated that the patient was a musician. We identified 9,803 “musicians” that we matched for sex, median age (across the medical record), ethnicity, race, length of record and number of visits with 49,015 controls. We fitted 1,263 logistic regression models (one for each phenotype classification).Results257 medical diagnoses were significantly more prevalent in musicians than controls after strict Bonferroni adjustment for the total number of phenotypes tested (p-value<7.6 x 10−6). Diseases of the larynx and the vocal cords (OR=2.32, p<2.84 x 10−191), and hearing loss (OR=1.36, p=5.98 x 10−97) were among the top associations. Anxiety disorder (OR=1.25, p=7.67 x 10−71), and Major depressive disorder (OR=1.21, p=4.88 x 10−36) were also strongly associated with musician status. Fifteen phenotypes were significantly more prevalent in non-musicians than musicians, including Coronary atherosclerosis (OR=0.91, p=1.77 x 10−10), and Ischemic Heart Disease (OR=0.92, p=1.65 x 10−09).ConclusionsAlthough being a musician was related to a large number of occupational health problems, we also identified protective effects of musicianship in which certain diagnoses were less common in musicians than in non-musicians, indicating that active musical engagement could have similar health benefits to athletic engagement.What is already known on this subject?Being a musician is a physically and psychologically demanding undertaking. Previous studies suggest musicians may be at higher risk for a variety of medical and mental health problems.What this study adds?Most studies of musicians’ health, are based on relatively small sample sizes, self-report questionnaire data, and often lack controls groups. In a sample of 14,379 musician cases and 71,895 matched controls identified in an Electronic Health Record database (EHR), we conducted the first and largest study to date to identify the medical diagnoses associated with musician patients in an EHR context. We replicated previous associations of musician status with medical problems and we identified a number of protective effects by observing diagnoses such as cardiovascular disease, respiratory failure, and renal failure, that were less common in musicians than in controls, in line with literature indicating that active musical engagement has similar health benefits to athletic engagement.


2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-76
Author(s):  
Jenni-Mari Räsänen ◽  
Kirsi Günther

The creation and use of electronic records in welfare services is a subject that has received widespread attention. The electronic health record (EHR) is used by different stakeholders (NGOs, hospitals, health care clinics and commissioning agencies) and thus enables the distribution and sharing of recorded information between them, and in this article we focus on the tensions that arise from the inter-organisational use of the EHR in the context of mental health services. The data corpus consists of four focus group interviews from three NGOs in Finland, and we draw on ethnomethodology to analyse the ways in which mental health workers together talk and make sense of these tensions in their interview talk. Our findings suggest that the EHR addresses concerns about the dislocation of clients and continuity of care, which create a need for mental health workers to trace clients' service use and also the contributions by other professionals. However, the introduction of the EHR has increased the recording work of mental health workers as well as of the monitoring of their work performance. Our findings strengthen the case for more transparent practices and rules of recording and information sharing among the different users of the EHR.


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 313-315 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathon W. Wanta ◽  
Joshua D. Niforatos ◽  
Emily Durbak ◽  
Adele Viguera ◽  
Murat Altinay

2016 ◽  
Vol 40 (5) ◽  
pp. 277-280 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Richardson ◽  
Joe McDonald

SummaryThe move to a digital health service may improve some components of health systems: information, communication and documentation of care. This article gives a brief definition and history of what is meant by an electronic health record (EHR). There is some evidence of benefits in a number of areas, including legibility, accuracy and the secondary use of information, but there is a need for further research, which may need to use different methodologies to analyse the impact an EHR has on patients, professionals and providers.


2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (12) ◽  
pp. 569-575 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Hebert ◽  
Elizabeth A. Madigan

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