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Title Oncology informatics : using health information technology to improve processes and outcomes in cancer / edited by Bradford W. Hesse, David K. Ahern, Ellen Beckjord
Published London, UK : Academic Press is an imprint of Elsevier, 2016

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Description 1 online resource
Contents Front Cover; Oncology Informatics; Copyright Page; Dedication; Contents; List of Contributors; Foreword; Preface; Introduction; I.1 Why This Book Now?; I.1.1 The Cancer Care Crisis; I.1.2 The Indispensable Role of Informatics; I.1.3 Health IT Adoption and Uptake From the Provider's Perspective; I.1.4 Health IT Adoption and Uptake From the Consumer's Perspective; I.2 The Purpose of This Book; I.2.1 Creating Deep Support for Engaged Patients; I.2.2 Augmenting and Coordinating an Adequately Trained Workforce; I.2.3 Serving as a Platform for Evidence Implementation
I.2.4 Enabling a Learning Health Care System in CancerI. 2.5 Speeding Up Processes in Translational Medicine; I.2.6 Promoting Accessible, Affordable Cancer Care; I.3 Organization of the Book; I.3.1 An Extraordinary Opportunity; I.3.2 Support Across the Continuum; I.3.3 The Science of Oncology Informatics; I.3.4 Accelerating Progress; I.4 Conclusion; List of Acronyms and Abbreviations; References; I. An Extraordinary Opportunity; 1 Creating a Learning Health Care System in Oncology; 1.1 The Challenges of Delivering Quality Cancer Care; 1.1.1 Diversity of Cancer and the Cancer Patient Population
1.1.2 The Need for Multidisciplinary Cancer Care1.1.3 The Complexity and Cost of Cancer Care Delivery; 1.2 Overview of Traditional Learning in Cancer Medicine; 1.2.1 Clinical Trials as the Foundation of Evidence-Based Medicine in Cancer; 1.2.2 Limitations of Conventional Clinical Trials; 1.3 The Interface of Quality, Value, and Learning; 1.4 ASCO's Vision for a Rapid Learning System in Oncology: CancerLinQ; 1.5 CancerLinQ Data Architecture; 1.6 History and Current Status of CancerLinQ Implementation; 1.6.1 Background and Prototype Development 2011-12; 1.6.2 CancerLinQ Development 2013-15
1.6.3 CancerLinQ and SAP1.7 CancerLinQ Solution Operating Characteristics; 1.7.1 Data Ingestion; 1.7.2 CancerLinQ Portal; 1.7.3 User Types; 1.7.4 Quality Benchmarking; 1.7.5 Clinical Decision Support; 1.7.6 Other Secondary Uses of Deidentified and/or Limited Data Sets; 1.8 Regulatory Underpinnings of CancerLinQ; 1.8.1 Data Governance Guiding Principles and Policies; 1.9 Summary and Conclusions; List of Acronyms and Abbreviations; Acknowledgments; References; 2 Reducing Cancer Disparities Through Community Engagement: The Promise of Informatics
Section 1: Public Health Informatics: Implications on Cancer Health Disparities2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Cancer Health Disparities: An Overview; 2.3 The Role of PHIs in Addressing Cancer Health Disparities; Section 2: CBPR to Inform the Practice of PHIs to Address Health Disparities; Section 3: Examples of Public Health and Health Informatics; 2.4 Example 1: Community Engagement and the Accountability for Cancer Care Through Undoing Racism and Equity Trial (ACCURE ... ; 2.5 Example 2: PHIs and the Chicago CommunityRx Innovation; Section 4: Discussion; 2.6 Challenges for the Field
Summary Oncology Informatics: Using Health Information Technology to Improve Processes and Outcomes in Cancer Care encapsulates National Cancer Institute-collected evidence into a format that is optimally useful for hospital planners, physicians, researcher, and informaticians alike as they collectively strive to accelerate progress against cancer using informatics tools. This book is a formational guide for turning clinical systems into engines of discovery as well as a translational guide for moving evidence into practice. It meets recommendations from the National Academies of Science to "reorient the research portfolio" toward providing greater "cognitive support for physicians, patients, and their caregivers" to "improve patient outcomes." Data from systems studies have suggested that oncology and primary care systems are prone to errors of omission, which can lead to fatal consequences downstream. By infusing the best science across disciplines, this book creates new environments of "Smart and Connected Health." Oncology Informatics is also a policy guide in an era of extensive reform in healthcare settings, including new incentives for healthcare providers to demonstrate "meaningful use" of these technologies to improve system safety, engage patients, ensure continuity of care, enable population health, and protect privacy. Oncology Informatics acknowledges this extraordinary turn of events and offers practical guidance for meeting meaningful use requirements in the service of improved cancer care. Anyone who wishes to take full advantage of the health information revolution in oncology to accelerate successes against cancer will find the information in this book valuable
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Online resource; title from PDF title page (Ebsco, viewed on March 25, 2016)
Subject Oncology -- Information technology
Information storage and retrieval systems -- Oncology.
Outcome assessment (Medical care)
Medical Informatics -- methods
Neoplasms
Public Health Informatics -- methods
Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care
HEALTH & FITNESS -- Diseases -- General.
MEDICAL -- Clinical Medicine.
MEDICAL -- Diseases.
MEDICAL -- Evidence-Based Medicine.
MEDICAL -- Internal Medicine.
Outcome assessment (Medical care)
Information storage and retrieval systems -- Oncology
Form Electronic book
Author Hesse, Bradford W., editor.
Ahern, David, editor
Beckjord, Ellen, editor
LC no. 2016934987
ISBN 9780128022009
0128022000
0128021152
9780128021156