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Reminders to physicians from an introspective computer medical record. A two-year randomized trial.
We developed a computer-stored medical record system containing a limited set of the total clinical data base--primarily diagnostic studies and treatments. This system responds to its own content according to physician-authored reminder rules. To determine the effect of the reminder messages generated by 1490 rules on physician behavior, we randomly assigned practitioners in a general medicine clinic to study or control groups. The computer found indications for six different actions per patient in 12 467 patients during a 2-year study: 61 study group residents who received computer reminders responded to 49% of these indications; 54 control group residents, to only 29% (p less than 0.0001). Preventive care (occult blood testing, mammographic screening, weight reduction diets, influenza and pneumococcal vaccines) was affected. The intentions of the study group to use a given action for an indication predicted their response to the indications (p less than 0.03, r2 = 0.33). The intentions of the control residents did not.
PMID: 6691639 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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Cited by over 100 PubMed Central articles
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General and Family Practice-Important Advances in Clinical Medicine: Computer-Assisted Reminders in Primary Care.
Hudson TW.
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[West J Med. 1984]
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Electronic result viewing and quality of care in small group practices.
Kern LM, Barrón Y, Blair AJ 3rd, Salkowe J, Chambers D, Callahan MA, Kaushal R.
J Gen Intern Med. 2008 Apr; 23(4):405-10.
[J Gen Intern Med. 2008]
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ReviewPrompting clinicians about preventive care measures: a systematic review of randomized controlled trials.
Dexheimer JW, Talbot TR, Sanders DL, Rosenbloom ST, Aronsky D.
J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2008 May-Jun; 15(3):311-20. Epub 2008 Feb 28.
[J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2008]
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