| Literature DB >> 22355229 |
Andre Barkhordarian, Brett Hacker, Francesco Chiappelli.
Abstract
Standards of care pertain to crafting and implementing patient-centered treatment interventions. Standards of care must take into consideration the patient's gender, ethnicity, medical and dental history, insurance coverage (or socioeconomic level, if a private patient), and the timeliness of the targeted scientific evidence. This resolves into a process by which clinical decision-making about the optimal patient-centered treatment relies on the best available research evidence, and all other necessary inputs and factors to provide the best possible treatment. Standards of care must be evidence-based, and not merely based on the evidence - the dichotomy being critical in contemporary health services research and practice. Evidence-based standards of care must rest on the best available evidence that emerges from a concerted hypothesis-driven process of research synthesis and meta-analysis. Health information technology needs to become an every-day reality in health services research and practice to ensure evidence-based standards of care. Current trends indicate that user-friendly methodologies, for the dissemination of evidence-based standards of care, must be developed, tested and distributed. They should include approaches for the quantification and analysis of the textual content of systematic reviews and of their summaries in the form of critical reviews and lay-language summaries.Entities:
Keywords: contextual analysis; evidence-based decision-making; quantification; standard of care; systematic reviews; text mining
Year: 2011 PMID: 22355229 PMCID: PMC3280503 DOI: 10.6026/007/97320630007315
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioinformation ISSN: 0973-2063
Figure 1Putative Health Information-Wayback - OsteoImmunopathology. Looking at the future of health information technology, one may conceive of a Health InformationWayback structure that geometrically expands Sir T. BrennersLee's original 1989 conceptualization of the World-Wide Web, and that borrows from the present Linked Data structure (cf., linkeddata.org). This higher scale network could be represented as an interconnection of texts via hyper-text links. A health information-Wayback structure, that is directly connected to, and is an integral part of the Wayback database, could be constructed, which would for instance comprise the topic osteoimmunopathology in HIV & AIDS [9]. This novel perspective on HIT structure, which ought to be articulated in view of future improvement in the technology, such as the Semantic web meta-data edifice, would represent an ensemble of universes of data and information that could be collected, connected, and linked - from the basic fundamental osteoimmune data describing the intertwined cross-talk between cellular immunity and bone metabolism during development and aging in health, and in HIV disease & AIDS related pathologies, to the genomic and proteomic signatures of specific osteo-immunopathologies, and could include subjects from rheumatoid arthritis to temporomandibular joint disorders, to the best available evidence for diagnosis and prognosis, critical summaries and lay-language summaries, and conceptual and textual data mining as outlined above - with patient histories, values and preferences (inter-linked at this point with other databases) in order to ensure the best available patient-centered health bioinformation technology-based clinical decisionmaking database of databases.