scholarly journals Text Formatting Based on Keyword Detection

Adverse drug effects are a major cause of death across the world each year because of prescription errors. Many of such errors involve the administration of the wrong drug or dosage by care givers to patients due to indecipherable handwritings, drug interactions, confusing drug names etc. The adoption of voice-based prescription project could eliminate some of these errors because they allow prescription information to be captured and heard through voice response rather than in the physician’s handwriting. Our project will generate an electronic prescription using a “Speech to Text converter” (Perceptual Linear Prediction (PLP)) and capture the data from the keywords spoken by doctor(s). There won’t be any need to carry paper prescriptions on revisiting doctors. A patient will be able to share his historic medical records to a new doctor. This project also provide facility to sign the prescription and send to the patient directly on his phone and email id. The System enables the patient to manage the privacy of their personal health record. This project is proposed to target those doctors and clinics that are still using paper-based handwritten prescriptions

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (19) ◽  
pp. 6711 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuri Choi ◽  
June-sung Kim ◽  
In Ho Kwon ◽  
Taerim Kim ◽  
Su Min Kim ◽  
...  

Collecting patient’s medical data is essential for emergency care. Although hospital-tethered personal health records (PHRs) can provide accurate data, they are not available as electronic information when the hospital does not develop and supply PHRs. The objective of this research was to evaluate whether a mobile app can assemble health data from different hospitals and enable interoperability. Moreover, we identified numerous barriers to overcome for putting health data into one place. The new mobile PHR (mPHR) application was developed and evaluated according to the four phases of the system development life cycle: defining input data and functions, developing a prototype, developing a mobile application, and implementation testing. We successfully introduced the FirstER (First for Emergency Room) platform on 23 September 2019. Additionally, validation in three tertiary hospitals has been carried out since the launch date. From 14 October to 29 November 2019, 1051 cases registered with the FirstER, and the total download count was 15,951 records. We developed and successfully implemented the mPHR service, which can be used as a health information exchange tool in emergency care, by integrating medical records from three different tertiary hospitals. By recognizing the significance and limitations of this service, it is necessary to study the development and implementation of mPHR services that are more suitable for emergency care.


2021 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian P Subbe ◽  
Hawys Tomos ◽  
Gwenlli Mai Jones ◽  
Paul Barach

Abstract Background Patient participation is increasingly recognized as a key component in the redesign of healthcare processes and is advocated as a means to improve patient safety. Objective To explore the usage of participatory engagement in patient-created and co-designed medical records for emergency admission to the hospital. Methods design: prospective iterative development and feasibility testing of personal health records; setting: an acute medical unit in a university-affiliated hospital; participants: patients admitted to hospital for medical emergencies; interventions: we used a design-led development of personal health record prototypes and feasibility testing of records completed by patients during the process of emergency admission. ‘Express-check-in’ records contained items of social history, screening questions for sepsis and acute kidney injury in addition to the patients’ ideas, concerns and expectations; main outcome measures: the outcome metrics focused on feasibility and a selection of quality domains, namely effectiveness of recording relevant history, time efficiency of the documentation process, patient-centredness of resulting records and staff and patient feedback. The incidence of sepsis and acute kidney injury were used as surrogate measures for assessing the safety impact. Results The medical record prototypes were developed in an iterative fashion and tested with 100 patients, in which 39 patients were 70 or older and 25 patients were classified as clinically frail. Ninety-six per cent of the data items were completed by patients with no or minimal help from healthcare professionals. The completeness of these patient records was superior to that of the corresponding medical records in that they contained deeply held beliefs and fears, whereas concerns and expectations recorded by patients were only mirrored in a small proportion of the formal clinical records. The sepsis self-screening tool identified 68% of patients requiring treatment with antibiotics. The intervention was feasible, independent of the level of formal education and effective in frail and elderly patients with support from family and staff. The prototyped records were well received and felt to be practical by patients and staff. The staff indicated that reading the patients’ documentation led to significant changes in their clinical management. Conclusions Medical record accessibility to patients during hospital care contributes to the co-management of personal healthcare and might add critical information over and above the records compiled by healthcare professionals.


2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. e307-e312 ◽  
Author(s):  
David E. Gerber ◽  
Andrew L. Laccetti ◽  
Beibei Chen ◽  
Jingsheng Yan ◽  
Jennifer Cai ◽  
...  

Among patients with cancer, personal health record portal use is frequent and increasing; understanding the implications of this new technology will be central to the delivery of safe and effective care.


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