Literature DB >> 12140850

Just-in-time delivery comes to knowledge management.

Thomas H Davenport1, John Glaser.   

Abstract

Like all primary care physicians, Dr. Bob Goldszer must stay on top of approximately 10,000 different diseases and syndromes, 3,000 medications, 1,100 laboratory tests, and many of the 400,000 articles added each year to the biomedical literature. That's no easy task. And it is, quite literally, a matter of life and death. The Institute of Medicine's 1999 report, To Err Is Human, suggests that more than a million injuries, and 90,000 deaths are attributable to medical errors annually. Something like 5% of hospital patients have adverse reactions to drugs, another study reports, and of those, 43% are serious, life threatening, or fatal. Many knowledge workers have problems similar to Dr. Goldszer's (though they're usually less life threatening). No matter what the field, many people simply can't keep up with all they need to know. In the early years of knowledge management, companies established knowledge networks and communities of practice, built knowledge repositories, and attempted to motivate people to share knowledge. But each of these activities involved a great deal of additional labor for knowledge workers. A better approach, say the authors, is to bake specialized knowledge into the jobs of highly skilled workers. Partners HealthCare has started to embed knowledge into the technology that doctors use in their jobs so that consulting it is no longer a separate activity. Now when Dr. Goldszer orders medicine or a lab test, the order-entry system automatically checks his decision against a massive clinical database as well as the patient's own medical record. Knowledge workers in other fields could likewise benefit from a just-in-time knowledge-management system tailored to deliver the right supporting information for the job at hand.

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Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12140850

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Harv Bus Rev        ISSN: 0017-8012


  9 in total

Review 1.  A consensus statement on considerations for a successful CPOE implementation.

Authors:  Joan S Ash; P Zoe Stavri; Gilad J Kuperman
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2003-01-28       Impact factor: 4.497

2.  Assessing and scaling the knowledge pyramid: the good-guideline guide.

Authors:  Dave Davis; Valerie Palda; Yale Drazin; Jess Rogers
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2006-01-31       Impact factor: 8.262

3.  Towards ubiquitous peer review strategies to sustain and enhance a clinical knowledge management framework.

Authors:  Roberto A Rocha; Richard L Bradshaw; Sharon M Bigelow; Timothy P Hanna; Guilherme Del Fiol; Nathan C Hulse; Lorrie K Roemer; Steven G Wilkinson
Journal:  AMIA Annu Symp Proc       Date:  2006

4.  CAH to CAH: EHR implementation advice to critical access hospitals from peer experts and other key informants.

Authors:  C K Craven; M C Sievert; L L Hicks; G L Alexander; L B Hearne; J H Holmes
Journal:  Appl Clin Inform       Date:  2014-02-12       Impact factor: 2.342

5.  Health@Home: the work of health information management in the household (HIMH): implications for consumer health informatics (CHI) innovations.

Authors:  Anne Moen; Patricia Flatley Brennan
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2005-07-27       Impact factor: 4.497

6.  Integrating Artificial Intelligence for Clinical and Laboratory Diagnosis - a Review.

Authors:  Taran Rishit Undru; Utkarsha Uday; Jyothi Tadi Lakshmi; Ariyanachi Kaliappan; Saranya Mallamgunta; Shalam Sheerin Nikhat; V Sakthivadivel; Archana Gaur
Journal:  Maedica (Bucur)       Date:  2022-06

Review 7.  Artificial intelligence as a fundamental tool in management of infectious diseases and its current implementation in COVID-19 pandemic.

Authors:  Ishnoor Kaur; Tapan Behl; Lotfi Aleya; Habibur Rahman; Arun Kumar; Sandeep Arora; Israt Jahan Bulbul
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2021-05-25       Impact factor: 4.223

8.  A novel strategy for evaluating the effects of an electronic test ordering alert message: Optimizing cardiac marker use.

Authors:  Jason M Baron; Kent B Lewandrowski; Irina K Kamis; Balaji Singh; Sidi M Belkziz; Anand S Dighe
Journal:  J Pathol Inform       Date:  2012-02-29

9.  Managing knowledge integration in a national health-care crisis: lessons learned from combating SARS in Singapore.

Authors:  Paul Raj Devadoss; Shan Ling Pan; Shreyan Singh
Journal:  IEEE Trans Inf Technol Biomed       Date:  2005-06
  9 in total

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