To view the 2010 Journal of Healthcare Information Management Subject Index, scroll down or click on the appropriate letter.
Index references should be interpreted as follows: "Fall, 68-74" refers to pages 68 through 74 of the Fall issue of the Journal of Healthcare Information Management.
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
AMBULATORY
Bauer JC. The HIT Futurist: Emerging Challenges for Ambulatory Records. 24(2):4-5.
Berlin A. Emotion and Ambulatory EHR in the ARRA Era. 24(2):19-22.
Dunnigan A, John K, Scott A, Von Bibra L, Walling J. Implementation of the Indian Health Service’s Resource and Patient Management System Electronic Health Record in the Ambulatory Care Setting at the Phoenix Indian Medical Center. 24(2):23-27.
Egleson N, Kang JH, Collymore D, Esmond W. A Health Center Controlled Network’s Experience in Ambulatory Care EHR Implementation. 24(2):28-33.
Kraatz AS, Lyons CM, Tomkinson J. Strategy and Governance for Successful Implementation of an Enterprise-Wide Ambulatory EMR. 24(2):34-40.
AMERICAN RECOVERY AND REINVESTMENT ACT
Bauer JC. The HIT Futurist: ARRA and HITECH—A Medical Economist’s Analysis. 24(1):4-5.
Miller SA, Blass G. HITECH Act: Will the HITECH Act Increase Compliance Activities? 24(1):13-14.
Miller SA, Blass G. HITECH Act: Pro-Active Audits of Information System Activity. 24(2):15-16.
Miller SA, Blass G. HITECH Act: Protecting Against Breach of Electronic
Protected Health Information. 24(3):7-8.
Murphy J. ARRA: How the Economic Stimulus Changed the Face of HIT. 24(1):8-9.
Doe R. Legislation: HITECH Notice Requirements for Breach of Unsecured PHI. 24(1):15-16.
Boyd AD, Funk EA, Schwartz SM, Kaplan B, Keenan GM. Top EHR Challenges in Light of the Stimulus. 24(1):18-24.
Saff E, Lanway C, Chenyek A, Morgan D. The Bay Area HIE: A Case Study in Connecting Stakeholders. 24(1):25-30.
Klein K. To Accomplish the Mandatory Initiatives of ARRA, Healthcare Organizations Will Require Significant and Thoughtful Planning, Prioritization and Execution. 24(1):31-35.
Fox SJ, Schick V. Negotiating Contracts for Vendor-Financed Purchases of EHR Systems. 24(1):36-42.
Miller SA, Blass G. Compliance: HITECH Accounting of Disclosures. 24(4):13-15.
CERTIFICATION
Lang RD. Health IT certification—the elusive seal of approval. 24(1):2-3.
CLINICAL INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Hoehn B. Integration Issues: What Is the Best Clinical Information Systems Strategy? 24(4):10-12.
Heinzer M. Essential Elements of Nursing Notes and the Transition to Electronic Health Records: The Migration From Narrative Charting Will Require Creativity to Include Essential Elements in EHRs. 24(4):53-59.
CPOE
Sengstack P. CPOE Configuration to Reduce Medication Errors: A Literature Review on the Safety of CPOE Systems and Design Recommendations. 24(4):26-32.
DOCTOR-PATIENT RELATIONSHIP
Cochran JH. Doctor-Patient Relationships: Continuous Healing Relationships Through Connectivity. 24(3):19-20.
E-CARE
Abraham C, Reese B. The Sentara Healthcare Experience Implementing e-Care. 24(1):44-50.
E-PRESCRIBING
Brooks P, Sonnenschein C. E-Prescribing: Where Health Information and Patient Care Intersect. 24(2):53-59.
ELECTRONIC HEALTH RECORDS
Andreen DL, Dobie LJ, Jasperson JC, Lucas TA, Wubbenhorst CL. Integration: The Conversion to Electronic Hospital Notes at Mayo Clinic Rochester. 24(3):57-64.
Lang RD. Editor’s Report: EHR Adoption—Are Financial Incentives Enough? 24(2):2-3.
Yackanicz L, Kerr R, Levick D. Physician Buy-In for EMRs. 24(2):41-44.
Arzt NH. Public Health: Service-Oriented Architecture in Public Health. 24(2):45-52.
Porter D, Curatolo C. Health Reform: The Federal Health Record Gateway. 24(2):60-63.
Whittenburg L. Workflow: Analysis of Nursing Workflow Documentation in the Electronic Health Record. 24(3):71-75.
Diamond LH, Catalano KA, Collins DA, Johnson P. Stories of Success!: Case Studies of Health IT in Support of the National Priorities Partnership Recommendations and The Joint Commission National Patient Safety Goals. 24(4):39-44.
GOVERNANCE
Hoehn BJ. Governance: Clinical Information Technology Governance. 24(2):13-14.
HEALTH INFORMATION EXCHANGES
Edwards A, Hollin I, Barry J, Kachnowski S. Barriers to cross-institutional health information exchange: A literature review. 24(3):22-34.
Krohn R. Technology: Despite Recent Developments, HIEs Face Daunting Obstacles to Success. 24(1):6-7.
Murphy J. Nursing Informatics: Connecting for Care—Nursing and Health Information Exchange. 24(3):11-13.
MEANINGFUL USE
Hoehn BJ. Clinical Adoption: Meaningful Use—What Does It Mean for Healthcare Organizations? 24(1):10-12.
MEDICATION
MacLean S, Cohen S, Knapp P. Medication Safety at Newton-Wellesley Hospital: Electronic Medication Management Projects from Home-to-Hospital and Hospital-to-Home. 24(4):34-38.
METRICS
Stefan S. Evaluation of Clinical Metrics: Medication Reconciliation, Problem List and Discharge Instructions. 24(4):21-25.
MOBILE
Krohn R. Technology: Healthcare Goes Mobile. 24(2):6-7.
Krohn R. Technology: There’s an App for That—mHealth Takes Center Stage. 24(3):9-10.
NURSING/NURSING INFORMATICS
Murphy J. Nursing Informatics: How HIT Fits in IOM/RWJF Initiative. 24(2):8-12.
Murphy J. Nursing Informatics: Connecting for Care—Nursing and Health Information Exchange. 24(3):11-13.
Whittenburg L. Workflow: Analysis of Nursing Workflow Documentation in the Electronic Health Record. 24(3):71-75.
Heinzer M. Essential Elements of Nursing Notes and the Transition to Electronic Health Records: The Migration From Narrative Charting Will Require Creativity to Include Essential Elements in EHRs. 24(4):53-59.
PATIENT SAFETY
Saimbert MK, Zhang Y, Pierce J, Moncrief ES, O’Hagan KB, P Cole. Medical Librarians Supporting Information Systems Project Lifecycles Toward Improved Patient Safety. 24(1):52-56.
Bauer JC. The HIT Futurist: Provider-Payor Health IT Networks. 24(4): 5-6.
PAYORS
Bauer JC. The HIT Futurist: Provider-Payor Health IT Networks. 24(4): 5-6.
PERSONAL HEALTH RECORDS
Wiljer D, Urowitz S, Apatu E, Leonard K, Quartey NK, Catton P. Understanding the Support Needs of Patients Accessing Test Results Online. 24(1):57-63.
PHARMACY/PHARMACY INFORMATICS
Hoehn BJ. Integration Issues: Closing the Loop—Integrating an Enterprise-Wide Pharmacy System. 24(3):14-16.
MacLean S, Cohen S, Knapp P. Medication Safety at Newton-Wellesley Hospital: Electronic Medication Management Projects from Home-to-Hospital and Hospital-to-Home. 24(4):34-38.
QUALITY OUTCOMES
Lang RD. Editor’s Report: Quality, Patient Safety and Error Prevention. 24(4):2-4: 2-4.
Murphy, J. Health Information Technology: Impact of Health IT on Care Quality. 24(4):7-9.
Meccariello M, Perkins D, Quigley LG, Rock A, Qiu J. Vital Time Savings: Evaluating the Use of an Automated Vital Signs Documentation System on a Medical/Surgical Unit. 24(4):46-51.
REGULATIONS
Kelley P. Medical Device Data Systems and FDA Regulation. 24(3):36-40.
RTLS
Krohn R. Technology: RTLS in the Clinical Toolkit. 24(4):18-19.
STANADARDS
STANADARDS
Bauer JC. The HIT Futurist: Performance Standards vs. Standardized Performance. 24(3):5-6.
Dermer M, Morgan M. Certification of Primary Care Electronic Medical Records:
Lessons Learned from Canada. 24(3):49-55.
Lang RD. Editor’s Report: HIT Standardization—Too Much, Too Soon? 24(3):2-4.
Velamuri S. QRDA—Technology Overview and Lessons Learned. 24(3):41-48.
VENDORS
Doe R. Vendors: Have the Appropriate License Rights in Your Software License Agreements. 24(2):17-18.
Doe B. Vendors: IT Systems and Third-Party Products. 24(3):17-18.
Oder K, Nauseda S, Carlson E, Llewellyn J, Brown F, Catrambone C, Fogg L, Garcia B. Technology: How to Select End User Clinical Data Entry Devices. 24(3):65-69.
Doe B. Vendors: Do I Need a Pre-Nuptial Agreement With My EHR Vendor? 24(4):16-17.