Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 27
Filter
1.
JMIR Res Protoc ; 13: e52882, 2024 Mar 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38457203

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Despite strong and growing interest in ending the ongoing opioid health crisis, there has been limited success in reducing the prevalence of opioid addiction and the number of deaths associated with opioid overdoses. Further, 1 explanation for this is that existing interventions target those who are opiate-dependent but do not prevent opioid-naïve patients from becoming addicted. OBJECTIVE: Leveraging behavioral economics at the patient level could help patients successfully use, discontinue, and dispose of their opioid medications in an acute pain setting. The primary goal of this project is to evaluate the effect of the 3 versions of the Opioid Management for You (OPY) tool on measures of opioid use relative to the standard of care by leveraging a pragmatic randomized controlled trial (RCT). METHODS: A team of researchers from the Center for Learning Health System Sciences (CLHSS) at the University of Minnesota partnered with M Health Fairview to design, build, and test the 3 versions of the OPY tool: social influence, precommitment, and testimonial version. The tool is being built using the Epic Care Companion (Epic Inc) platform and interacts with the patient through their existing MyChart (Epic Systems Corporation) personal health record account, and Epic patient portal, accessed through a phone app or the MyChart website. We have demonstrated feasibility with pilot data of the social influence version of the OPY app by targeting our pilot to a specific cohort of patients undergoing upper-extremity procedures. This study will use a group sequential RCT design to test the impact of this important health system initiative. Patients who meet OPY inclusion criteria will be stratified into low, intermediate, and high risk of opiate use based on their type of surgery. RESULTS: This study is being funded and supported by the CLHSS Rapid Prospective Evaluation and Digital Technology Innovation Programs, and M Health Fairview. Support and coordination provided by CLHSS include the structure of engagement, survey development, data collection, statistical analysis, and dissemination. The project was initially started in August 2022. The pilot was launched in February 2023 and is still running, with the data last counted in August 2023. The actual RCT is planned to start by early 2024. CONCLUSIONS: Through this RCT, we will test our hypothesis that patient opioid use and diverted prescription opioid availability can both be improved by information delivery applied through a behavioral economics lens via sending nudges directly to the opioid users through their personal health record. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT06124079; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT06124079. INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): PRR1-10.2196/52882.

2.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 310: 609-613, 2024 Jan 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38269881

ABSTRACT

While advanced care planning (ACP) is an essential practice for ensuring patient-centered care, its adoption remains poor and the completeness of its documentation variable. Natural language processing (NLP) approaches hold promise for supporting ACP, including its use for decision support to improve ACP gaps at the point of care. ACP themes were annotated on palliative care notes across four annotators (Fleiss kappa = 0.753) and supervised models trained (Huggingface models bert-base-uncased and Bio_ClinicalBERT) using 5-fold cross validation (F1=0.8, precision=0.75, recall=0.86, any theme). When applied across the full note corpus of 12,711 notes, we observed variability in documentation of ACP information. Our findings demonstrate the promise of NLP approaches for informatics-based approaches for ACP and patient-centered care.


Subject(s)
Advance Care Planning , Natural Language Processing , Humans , Documentation , Palliative Care , Patient-Centered Care
3.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 310: 976-980, 2024 Jan 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38269954

ABSTRACT

We describe the development and usability evaluation of a novel patient engagement tool (OPY) in its early stage from perspectives of both experts and end-users. The tool is aimed at engaging patients in positive behaviors surrounding the use, weaning, and disposal of opioid medications in the post-surgical setting. The messaging and design of the application were created through a behavioral economics lens. Expert-based heuristic analysis and user testing were conducted and demonstrated that while patients found the tool to be easy to use and subjectively somewhat useful, additional work to enhance the user interface and features is needed in close partnership with developers and stakeholders.


Subject(s)
Lenses , Mobile Applications , Humans , Analgesics, Opioid/therapeutic use , Economics, Behavioral , Heuristics
4.
JMIR Hum Factors ; 9(4): e39646, 2022 Dec 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36525294

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Extended foster care programs help prepare transitional-aged youth (TAY) to step into adulthood and live independent lives. Aspiranet, one of California's largest social service organizations, used a social care management solution (SCMS) to meet TAY's needs. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to investigate the impact of an SCMS, IBM Watson Care Manager (WCM), in transforming foster program service delivery and improving TAY outcomes. METHODS: We used a mixed methods study design by collecting primary data from stakeholders through semistructured interviews in 2021 and by pulling secondary data from annual reports, system use logs, and data repositories from 2014 to 2021. Thematic analysis based on grounded theory was used to analyze qualitative data using NVivo software. Descriptive analysis of aggregated outcome metrics in the quantitative data was performed and compared across 2 periods: pre-SCMS implementation (before October 31, 2016) and post-SCMS implementation (November 1, 2016, and March 31, 2021). RESULTS: In total, 6 Aspiranet employees (4 leaders and 2 life coaches) were interviewed, with a median time of 56 (IQR 53-67) minutes. The majority (5/6, 83%) were female, over 30 years of age (median 37, IQR 32-39) with a median of 6 (IQR 5-10) years of experience at Aspiranet and overall field experience of 10 (IQR 7-14) years. Most (4/6, 67%) participants rated their technological skills as expert. Thematic analysis of participants' interview transcripts yielded 24 subthemes that were grouped into 6 superordinate themes: study context, the impact of the new tool, key strengths, commonly used features, expectations with WCM, and limitations and recommendations. The tool met users' initial expectations of streamlining tasks and adopting essential functionalities. Median satisfaction scores around pre- and post-WCM workflow processes remained constant between 2 life coaches (3.25, IQR 2.5-4); however, among leaders, post-WCM scores (median 4, IQR 4-5) were higher than pre-WCM scores (median 3, IQR 3-3). Across the 2 study phases, Aspiranet served 1641 TAY having consistent population demographics (median age of 18, IQR 18-19 years; female: 903/1641, 55.03%; race and ethnicity: Hispanic or Latino: 621/1641, 37.84%; Black: 470/1641, 28.64%; White: 397/1641, 24.19%; Other: 153/1641, 9.32%). Between the pre- and post-WCM period, there was an increase in full-time school enrollment (359/531, 67.6% to 833/1110, 75.04%) and a reduction in part-time school enrollment (61/531, 11.5% to 91/1110, 8.2%). The median number of days spent in the foster care program remained the same (247, IQR 125-468 years); however, the number of incidents reported monthly per hundred youth showed a steady decline, even with an exponentially increasing number of enrolled youth and incidents. CONCLUSIONS: The SCMS for coordinating care and delivering tailored services to TAY streamlined Aspiranet's workflows and processes and positively impacted youth outcomes. Further enhancements are needed to better align with user and youth needs.

5.
JMIR Cancer ; 8(2): e31461, 2022 Apr 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35389353

ABSTRACT

As technology continues to improve, health care systems have the opportunity to use a variety of innovative tools for decision-making, including artificial intelligence (AI) applications. However, there has been little research on the feasibility and efficacy of integrating AI systems into real-world clinical practice, especially from the perspectives of clinicians who use such tools. In this paper, we review physicians' perceptions of and satisfaction with an AI tool, Watson for Oncology, which is used for the treatment of cancer. Watson for Oncology has been implemented in several different settings, including Brazil, China, India, South Korea, and Mexico. By focusing on the implementation of an AI-based clinical decision support system for oncology, we aim to demonstrate how AI can be both beneficial and challenging for cancer management globally and particularly for low-middle-income countries. By doing so, we hope to highlight the need for additional research on user experience and the unique social, cultural, and political barriers to the successful implementation of AI in low-middle-income countries for cancer care.

6.
JMIR Public Health Surveill ; 7(10): e32468, 2021 10 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34612841

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Contact tracing in association with quarantine and isolation is an important public health tool to control outbreaks of infectious diseases. This strategy has been widely implemented during the current COVID-19 pandemic. The effectiveness of this nonpharmaceutical intervention is largely dependent on social interactions within the population and its combination with other interventions. Given the high transmissibility of SARS-CoV-2, short serial intervals, and asymptomatic transmission patterns, the effectiveness of contact tracing for this novel viral agent is largely unknown. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to identify and synthesize evidence regarding the effectiveness of contact tracing on infectious viral disease outcomes based on prior scientific literature. METHODS: An evidence-based review was conducted to identify studies from the PubMed database, including preprint medRxiv server content, related to the effectiveness of contact tracing in viral outbreaks. The search dates were from database inception to July 24, 2020. Outcomes of interest included measures of incidence, transmission, hospitalization, and mortality. RESULTS: Out of 159 unique records retrieved, 45 (28.3%) records were reviewed at the full-text level, and 24 (15.1%) records met all inclusion criteria. The studies included utilized mathematical modeling (n=14), observational (n=8), and systematic review (n=2) approaches. Only 2 studies considered digital contact tracing. Contact tracing was mostly evaluated in combination with other nonpharmaceutical interventions and/or pharmaceutical interventions. Although some degree of effectiveness in decreasing viral disease incidence, transmission, and resulting hospitalizations and mortality was observed, these results were highly dependent on epidemic severity (R0 value), number of contacts traced (including presymptomatic and asymptomatic cases), timeliness, duration, and compliance with combined interventions (eg, isolation, quarantine, and treatment). Contact tracing effectiveness was particularly limited by logistical challenges associated with increased outbreak size and speed of infection spread. CONCLUSIONS: Timely deployment of contact tracing strategically layered with other nonpharmaceutical interventions could be an effective public health tool for mitigating and suppressing infectious outbreaks by decreasing viral disease incidence, transmission, and resulting hospitalizations and mortality.


Subject(s)
Communicable Disease Control/methods , Contact Tracing , Virus Diseases/prevention & control , COVID-19/prevention & control , Humans
7.
JMIR Med Inform ; 9(8): e23219, 2021 Aug 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34459741

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Social programs are services provided by governments, nonprofits, and other organizations to help improve the health and well-being of individuals, families, and communities. Social programs aim to deliver services effectively and efficiently, but they are challenged by information silos, limited resources, and the need to deliver frequently changing mandated benefits. OBJECTIVE: We aim to explore how an information system designed for social programs helps deliver services effectively and efficiently across diverse programs. METHODS: This viewpoint describes the configurable and modular architecture of Social Program Management (SPM), a system to support efficient and effective delivery of services through a wide range of social programs and lessons learned from implementing SPM across diverse settings. We explored usage data to inform the engagement and impact of SPM on the efficient and effective delivery of services. RESULTS: The features and functionalities of SPM seem to support the goals of social programs. We found that SPM provides fundamental management processes and configurable program-specific components to support social program administration; has been used by more than 280,000 caseworkers serving more than 30 million people in 13 countries; contains features designed to meet specific user requirements; supports secure information sharing and collaboration through data standardization and aggregation; and offers configurability and flexibility, which are important for digital transformation and organizational change. CONCLUSIONS: SPM is a user-centered, configurable, and flexible system for managing social program workflows.

8.
SAGE Open Med ; 9: 20503121211022973, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34164126

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Non-pharmaceutical interventions (e.g. quarantine and isolation) are used to mitigate and control viral infectious disease, but their effectiveness has not been well studied. For COVID-19, disease control efforts will rely on non-pharmaceutical interventions until pharmaceutical interventions become widely available, while non-pharmaceutical interventions will be of continued importance thereafter. METHODS: This rapid evidence-based review provides both qualitative and quantitative analyses of the effectiveness of social distancing non-pharmaceutical interventions on disease outcomes. Literature was retrieved from MEDLINE, Google Scholar, and pre-print databases (BioRxiv.org, MedRxiv.org, and Wellcome Open Research). RESULTS: Twenty-eight studies met inclusion criteria (n = 28). Early, sustained, and combined application of various non-pharmaceutical interventions could mitigate and control primary outbreaks and prevent more severe secondary or tertiary outbreaks. The strategic use of non-pharmaceutical interventions decreased incidence, transmission, and/or mortality across all interventions examined. The pooled attack rates for no non-pharmaceutical intervention, single non-pharmaceutical interventions, and multiple non-pharmaceutical interventions were 42% (95% confidence interval = 30% - 55%), 29% (95% confidence interval = 23% - 36%), and 22% (95% confidence interval = 16% - 29%), respectively. CONCLUSION: Implementation of multiple non-pharmaceutical interventions at key decision points for public health could effectively facilitate disease mitigation and suppression until pharmaceutical interventions become available. Dynamics around R 0 values, the susceptibility of certain high-risk patient groups to infection, and the probability of asymptomatic cases spreading disease should be considered.

9.
J Med Internet Res ; 23(3): e24122, 2021 03 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33709928

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: People with complex needs, such as those experiencing homelessness, require concurrent, seamless support from multiple social service agencies. Sonoma County, California has one of the nation's largest homeless populations among largely suburban communities. To support client-centered care, the county deployed a Care Management and Coordination System (CMCS). This system comprised the Watson Care Manager (WCM), a front-end system, and Connect 360, which is an integrated data hub that aggregates information from various systems into a single client record. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to evaluate the perceived impact and usability of WCM in delivering services to the homeless population in Sonoma County. METHODS: A mixed methods study was conducted to identify ways in which WCM helps to coordinate care. Interviews, observations, and surveys were conducted, and transcripts and field notes were thematically analyzed and directed by a grounded theory approach. Responses to the Technology Acceptance Model survey were analyzed. RESULTS: A total of 16 participants were interviewed, including WCM users (n=8) and department leadership members (n=8). In total, 3 interdisciplinary team meetings were observed, and 8 WCM users were surveyed. WCM provided a central shared platform where client-related, up-to-date, comprehensive, and reliable information from participating agencies was consolidated. Factors that facilitated WCM use were users' enthusiasm regarding the tool functionalities, scalability, and agency collaboration. Constraining factors included the suboptimal awareness of care delivery goals and functionality of the system among the community, sensitivities about data sharing and legal requirements, and constrained funding from government and nongovernment organizations. Overall, users found WCM to be a useful tool that was easy to use and helped to enhance performance. CONCLUSIONS: WCM supports the delivery of care to individuals with complex needs. Integration of data and information in a CMCS can facilitate coordinated care. Future research should examine WCM and similar CMCSs in diverse populations and settings.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care , Ill-Housed Persons , Vulnerable Populations , Female , Humans , Information Dissemination , Social Work , Surveys and Questionnaires
10.
AMIA Jt Summits Transl Sci Proc ; 2020: 231-240, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32477642

ABSTRACT

Complementary alternative medicine, especially dietary supplements (DS), has gained increasing popularity for weight loss due to its availability without prescription, price, and ease of use. Besides weight loss, there are various perceived, potential benefits linked to DS use. However, health consumers with limited health literacy may not adequately know the benefits and risk of overdose for DS. In this project, we aim to gain a better understanding of the use of DS products among obese people as well as the perceived benefits of these products. We identified obese adults after combining the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey data collected from 2003 to 2014. We found that there is a knowledge gap between the reported benefits of major DS by obese adults and the existing DS knowledge base and label database. This gap may inform the design of patient education material on DS usage in the future.

11.
J Am Med Inform Assoc ; 27(4): 539-548, 2020 04 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32068839

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To build a knowledge base of dietary supplement (DS) information, called the integrated DIetary Supplement Knowledge base (iDISK), which integrates and standardizes DS-related information from 4 existing resources. MATERIALS AND METHODS: iDISK was built through an iterative process comprising 3 phases: 1) establishment of the content scope, 2) development of the data model, and 3) integration of existing resources. Four well-regarded DS resources were integrated into iDISK: The Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database, the "About Herbs" page on the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center website, the Dietary Supplement Label Database, and the Natural Health Products Database. We evaluated the iDISK build process by manually checking that the data elements associated with 50 randomly selected ingredients were correctly extracted and integrated from their respective sources. RESULTS: iDISK encompasses a terminology of 4208 DS ingredient concepts, which are linked via 6 relationship types to 495 drugs, 776 diseases, 985 symptoms, 605 therapeutic classes, 17 system organ classes, and 137 568 DS products. iDISK also contains 7 concept attribute types and 3 relationship attribute types. Evaluation of the data extraction and integration process showed average errors of 0.3%, 2.6%, and 0.4% for concepts, relationships and attributes, respectively. CONCLUSION: We developed iDISK, a publicly available standardized DS knowledge base that can facilitate more efficient and meaningful dissemination of DS knowledge.


Subject(s)
Dietary Supplements , Knowledge Bases , Vocabulary, Controlled , Databases, Factual , Humans , Product Labeling , RxNorm , Unified Medical Language System
12.
Comput Inform Nurs ; 38(6): 274-280, 2020 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31904594

ABSTRACT

Despite the many diabetes applications available, the rate of use is low, which may be associated with design issues. This study examined app usability compliance with heuristic design principles, guided by the Self-determination Theory on motivation. Four top-rated commercially available apps (Glucose Buddy, MyNetDiary, mySugr, and OnTrack) were tested for data recording, blood glucose analysis, and data sharing important for diabetes competence, autonomy, and connection with a healthcare provider. Four clinicians rated each app's compliance with Nielsen's 10 principles and its usability using the System Usability Scale. All four apps lacked one task function related to diabetes care competence or autonomy. Experts ranked app usability rated with the System Usability Scale: OnTrack (61) and Glucose Buddy (60) as a "D" and MyNetDairy (41) and mySugr (15) as an "F." A total of 314 heuristic violations were identified. The heuristic principle violated most frequently was "Help and Documentation" (n = 50), followed by "Error Prevention" (n = 45) and "Aesthetic and Minimalist Design" (n = 43). Four top-rated diabetes apps have "marginally acceptable" to "completely unacceptable." Future diabetes app design should target patient motivation and incorporate key heuristic design principles by providing tutorials with a help function, eliminating error-prone operations, and providing enhanced graphical or screen views.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/therapy , Heuristics , Mobile Applications/standards , User-Computer Interface , Adult , Blood Glucose , Cell Phone , Health Behavior , Humans , Motivation , Self Care
13.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 264: 1474-1475, 2019 Aug 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31438188

ABSTRACT

Dietary supplements (DSs) have gained increased popularity for weight loss due to its availability without prescription, relatively low price, and ease of use. Consumers with limited health literacy may not adequately know the benefits and risks associated with DSs. In this project, we found a knowledge gap between reported benefits of major DSs by adults with obesity in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2003-2014 and those reported in existing DS knowledge databases.


Subject(s)
Health Literacy , Nutrition Surveys , Obesity , Dietary Supplements , Humans , Weight Loss
14.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 264: 323-327, 2019 Aug 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31437938

ABSTRACT

Despite the high consumption of dietary supplements (DS), few reliable, relevant, and comprehensive online resources could satisfy information seekers. This research study aims to understand consumer information needs on DS using topic modeling, and to evaluate accuracy in correctly identifying topics from social media. We retrieved 16,095 unique questions posted on Yahoo! Answers relating to 438 unique DS ingredients mentioned in sub-section, "Alternative medicine" under the section, "Health" . We implemented an unsupervised topic modeling method, Correlation Explanation (CorEx) to unveil the various topics in which consumers are most interested. We manually reviewed the keywords of all the 200 topics generated by CorEx and assigned them to 38 health-related categories, corresponding to 12 higher-level groups. We found high accuracy (90-100%) in identifying questions that correctly align with the selected topics. The results could guide us to generate a more comprehensive and structured DS resource based on consumers' information needs.


Subject(s)
Social Media , Dietary Supplements
15.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 264: 408-412, 2019 Aug 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31437955

ABSTRACT

The use of dietary supplements (DSs) is increasing in the U.S. As such, it is crucial for consumers, clinicians, and researchers to be able to find information about DS products. However, labeling regulations allow great variability in DS product names, which makes searching for this information difficult. Following the RxNorm drug name normalization model, we developed a rule-based natural language processing system to normalize DS product names using pattern templates. We evaluated the system on product names extracted from the Dietary Supplement Label Database. Our system generated 136 unique templates and obtained a coverage of 72%, a 32% increase over the existing RxNorm model. Manual review showed that our system achieved a normalization accuracy of 0.86. We found that the normalization of DS product names is feasible, but more work is required to improve the generalizability of the system.


Subject(s)
Dietary Supplements , RxNorm , Databases, Factual , Natural Language Processing
16.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ; 19(Suppl 4): 150, 2019 08 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31391091

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Dietary supplements (DSs) are widely used. However, consumers know little about the safety and efficacy of DSs. There is a growing interest in accessing health information online; however, health information, especially online information on DSs, is scattered with varying levels of quality. In our previous work, we prototyped a web application, ALOHA, with interactive graph-based visualization to facilitate consumers' browsing of the integrated DIetary Supplement Knowledge base (iDISK) curated from scientific resources, following an iterative user-centered design (UCD) process. METHODS: Following UCD principles, we carried out two design iterations to enrich the functionalities of ALOHA and enhance its usability. For each iteration, we conducted a usability assessment and design session with a focus group of 8-10 participants and evaluated the usability with a modified System Usability Scale (SUS). Through thematic analysis, we summarized the identified usability issues and conducted a heuristic evaluation to map them to the Gerhardt-Powals' cognitive engineering principles. We derived suggested improvements from each of the usability assessment session and enhanced ALOHA accordingly in the next design iteration. RESULTS: The SUS score in the second design iteration decreased to 52.2 ± 11.0 from 63.75 ± 7.2 in our original work, possibly due to the high number of new functionalities we introduced. By refining existing functionalities to make the user interface simpler, the SUS score increased to 64.4 ± 7.2 in the third design iteration. All participants agreed that such an application is urgently needed to address the gaps in how DS information is currently organized and consumed online. Moreover, most participants thought that the graph-based visualization in ALOHA is a creative and visually appealing format to obtain health information. CONCLUSIONS: In this study, we improved a novel interactive visualization platform, ALOHA, for the general public to obtain DS-related information through two UCD design iterations. The lessons learned from the two design iterations could serve as a guide to further enhance ALOHA and the development of other knowledge graph-based applications. Our study also showed that graph-based interactive visualization is a novel and acceptable approach to end-users who are interested in seeking online health information of various domains.


Subject(s)
Dietary Supplements , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Data Display , Focus Groups , Heuristics , Humans , Patient Education as Topic , Pattern Recognition, Automated , Software , User-Computer Interface
17.
AMIA Jt Summits Transl Sci Proc ; 2019: 258-266, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31258978

ABSTRACT

Dietary supplement adverse events are potentially severe, yet knowledge regarding the safety of dietary supplements is limited. The CFSAN Adverse Event Reporting System (CAERS) contains records of adverse events attributed to supplements and is potentially useful for dietary supplement pharmacovigilance. This study investigates the feasibility of mining CAERS for dietary supplement adverse events as well as for monitoring the safety of dietary supplement products. Using three online resources, we mapped products in CAERS to their listed ingredients. We then ran four standard signal detection algorithms over the ingredient-adverse event and product-adverse event pairs extracted from CAERS and ranked the detected associations. Comparing 130 signals detected by all four algorithms with a dietary supplement resource, we found evidence for 73 (56%) associations. In addition, some detected product-adverse event signals were consistent with product safety information. We have made a database of the detected adverse events publicly available at https://github.com/zhang-informatics/DDSAE.

18.
AMIA Jt Summits Transl Sci Proc ; 2019: 799-808, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31259037

ABSTRACT

Clinical trials are essential in exploring the safety and efficacy of a new intervention. However, restrictive eligibility criteria pose recruitment challenges that could prolong study durations and reduce study generalizability to the real-world population. The objective of this study is to compare the study populations of dietary supplement (DS) and drug trials on metabolic syndrome related conditions. Using the COMPACT database, we retrieved the DS and drug trials related to metabolic syndrome and performed aggregate analyses on the study populations with respect to various quantitative eligibility criteria. We also extracted and compared baseline characteristics, both quantitative and qualitative, of recruited patients in completed trials. We found similarities and differences in baseline characteristics of enrolled patients between drug and DS clinical trials on metabolic syndrome-related conditions. This comparative aggregate analysis is an initial step towards improving patient recruitment efficacy and population representativeness for clinical trials across conditions and intervention types.

19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32030368

ABSTRACT

Eating disorders (EDs) are serious mental illnesses associated with physical and psychiatric problems, and premature death. Examining social media communication about ED symptoms may provide insight into how to prevent and treat these disorders. This study is to explore topics on Twitter related to EDs. We applied the Correlation Explanation (CorEx) topic model on 18,288 ED-related tweets and identified 20 topics, which were further grouped into 8 categories. The top two topic categories are body image and ED consequences. We manually evaluated the relevance of tweets to their assigned topics and average accuracy is 77.86%. Our findings are consistent with another study using content analysis, and we identified additional topics, such as ED consequences, pornography, and treatment and education from these tweets.

20.
AMIA Jt Summits Transl Sci Proc ; 2017: 207-216, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29888074

ABSTRACT

Dietary supplements, often considered as food, are widely consumed despite of limited knowledge around their safety/efficacy and any well-established regulatory policies, unlike their drug counterparts. Informatics methods may be useful in filling this knowledge gap, however, the lack of standardized representation of DS hinders this progress. In this pilot study, five electronic DS resources, i.e., NM, DSID & NHPID (ingredient level) and DSLD & LNHPD (product level), were evaluated and compared both quantitatively and qualitatively employing four phases. Essential data elements needed for comprehensive DS representation were compiled based on LanguaL code (food) & AHFSA (drugs) guidelines and employed as a check-list. We further investigated the completeness of DS representation by incorporating Ginseng and Fish oil as examples. We found fragmented and inconsistent distribution of DS representation in terms of essential data elements across five resources. This study provides a preliminary platform for development of standardized DS terminology/ontology model.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL