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Condition: Heart Attack
Management: Electronic Health Records (EHR)

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Total 103 results found since Jan 2013.

Assessing the use of observational methods and real-world data to emulate ongoing randomized controlled trials
CONCLUSION: Despite challenges, observational methods and real-world data can be leveraged in certain important situations for a more timely evaluation of drug effectiveness and safety in more diverse and representative patient populations.PMID:37589143 | DOI:10.1177/17407745231193137
Source: Clinical Trials - August 17, 2023 Category: Research Authors: Joshua D Wallach Yihong Deng Eric C Polley Sanket S Dhruva Jeph Herrin Kenneth Quinto Charu Gandotra William Crown Peter Noseworthy Xiaoxi Yao Molly Moore Jeffery Timothy D Lyon Joseph S Ross Rozalina G McCoy Source Type: research

Nursing Diagnosis Accuracy in Nursing Education: Clinical Decision Support System Compared With Paper-Based Documentation-A Before and After Study
Comput Inform Nurs. 2023 Aug 15. doi: 10.1097/CIN.0000000000001066. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTComputer-based technologies have been widely used in nursing education, although the best educational modality to improve documentation and nursing diagnostic accuracy using electronic health records is still under investigation. It is important to address this gap and seek an effective way to address increased accuracy around nursing diagnoses identification. Nursing diagnoses are judgments that represent a synthesis of data collected by the nurse and used to guide interventions and to achieve desirable patients' outcomes. Th...
Source: Computers, Informatics, Nursing : CIN - August 14, 2023 Category: Nursing Authors: Luca Bertocchi Angelo Dante Carmen La Cerra Vittorio Masotta Alessia Marcotullio Valeria Caponnetto Fabio Ferraiuolo Dorothy Jones Loreto Lancia Cristina Petrucci Source Type: research

Rates of  Preeclampsia and Post-preeclamptic Cardiovascular Disease Among US Military Servicewomen: A Retrospective Case-cohort Study
CONCLUSION: In this study, we report overall higher incidence of PE in military women than what is published for civilian women in all races and across all services. Importantly, we do not find significantly higher numbers of PE and post-PE CVD for African American, compared to White women in the military. Our study is not designed to address differences between military and civilian PE epidemiology, but these results deserve further exploration. This study shines light on a health risk unique to women, which we found to be more prevalent in the US Military than published civilian population. Further study to determine the...
Source: Military Medicine - August 4, 2023 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Authors: Thornton S Mu Amelia Duran-Stanton Emily A Stone Lee Ann Zarzabal Andrea Loewendorf Source Type: research