Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 138
pro vyhledávání: '"Gordon M. Trenholme"'
Publikováno v:
Emerging Infectious Diseases, Vol 16, Iss 10, Pp 1594-1597 (2010)
In the absence of established guidelines for hospitalization of patients with pandemic (H1N1) 2009, we studied emergency department patients to identify clinical parameters that predict need for hospitalization. Independent predictors of hospitalizat
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/97cadb649137454ab8d1103acaecf9e1
Autor:
Barbara Schmitt, John Segreti, Robert A. Weinstein, Kavitha Prabaker, Chethra Muthiah, Sharon F. Welbel, Mary K. Hayden, Gordon M. Trenholme, Mary Alice Lavin, Mary Lou Scorza, Kathleen G. Beavis, Jyothirmai Cheerala
Publikováno v:
Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology. 36:198-203
OBJECTIVETo identify the source of a pseudo-outbreak ofMycobacterium gordonaeDESIGNOutbreak investigation.SETTINGUniversity Hospital in Chicago, Ilinois.PATIENTSHospital patients withM. gordonae-positive clinical cultures.METHODSAn increase in isolat
Autor:
Michael J. Waddell, Dino P. Rumoro, Marilyn M. Hallock, Gillian S. Gibbs, Shital Shah, Gordon M. Trenholme
Publikováno v:
Online Journal of Public Health Informatics
Objective To develop and validate a Zika virus disease syndrome definition within the GUARDIAN (Geographic Utilization of Artificial Intelligence in Real-Time for Disease Identification and Alert Notification) surveillance system. Introduction In 201
Autor:
Marilyn M. Hallock, Shital Shah, Michael J. Waddell, Gillian S. Gibbs, Dino P. Rumoro, Gordon M. Trenholme
Publikováno v:
Online Journal of Public Health Informatics
Objective To explain the utility of using an automated syndromic surveillance program with advanced natural language processing (NLP) to improve clinical quality measures reporting for influenza immunization. Introduction Clinical quality measures (C
Autor:
Shital Shah, Gordon M. Trenholme, Marilyn M. Hallock, Michael J. Waddell, Dino P. Rumoro, Gillian S. Gibbs
Publikováno v:
Online Journal of Public Health Informatics
Objective To examine the baseline influenza-like illness (ILI) rates in the emergency departments (ED) of a large academic medical center (AMC), community hospital (CH), and neighboring adult and pediatric primary care clinics. Introduction The prima
Autor:
Michael J. Waddell, Marilyn M. Hallock, Shital Shah, Gillian S. Gibbs, Joseph P. Bernstein, Dino P. Rumoro, Gordon M. Trenholme
Publikováno v:
Online Journal of Public Health Informatics. 8
Processing free-text clinical information in an electronic medical record may enhance surveillance systems for early identification of influenza-like illness outbreaks. However, processing clinical text using natural language processing (NLP) poses a
Autor:
Dino P. Rumoro, Michael J. Waddell, Gillian S. Gibbs, Gordon M. Trenholme, Joseph P. Bernstein, Shital Shah, Marilyn M. Hallock
Publikováno v:
Online Journal of Public Health Informatics. 8
This was a retrospective cross-sectional study of 100 emergency department positive influenza-like illness (ILI) patients at an academic medical center to investigate which section(s) of a patient's electronic medical record (EMR) contains the most r
Autor:
Dino P. Rumoro, Marilyn M. Hallock, Gillian S. Gibbs, Gordon M. Trenholme, Michael J. Waddell, Joseph P. Bernstein, Shital Shah
Publikováno v:
Online Journal of Public Health Informatics. 8
Emergency department (ED) data are key components for syndromic surveillance systems. However, the lack of standardization for the content in chief complaint (CC) free-text fields may make it challenging to use these elements in syndromic surveillanc
Autor:
Sarah Won, David C Nguyen, Kamaljit Singh, Philippe Morency-Potvin, Gordon M. Trenholme, Amy Hanson, Andrew Simms, Enrique Cornejo Cisneros, Sheila Wang, Christy Varughese
Publikováno v:
Open Forum Infectious Diseases. 3
Autor:
Karen Lolans, Gordon M. Trenholme, Leslie A Chapman, Hemil Gonzalez, Nicholas M. Moore, Andrew Simms
Publikováno v:
Open Forum Infectious Diseases
Background Two strains of influenza B virus, B/Yamagata and B/Victoria, co-circulate in the USA, typically appearing in late March. This year, influenza B virus (FluB) co-circulated consistently with influenza A virus (FluA). We hypothesized that thi