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Month wise articles
Figures next to the month indicate the number of articles in that month
2019
December
[
5
]
November
[
4
]
September
[
4
]
August
[
3
]
July
[
6
]
June
[
1
]
May
[
2
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April
[
6
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March
[
3
]
February
[
4
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January
[
2
]
2018
December
[
10
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November
[
4
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October
[
3
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September
[
4
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August
[
1
]
July
[
3
]
June
[
5
]
May
[
4
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April
[
10
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March
[
2
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February
[
4
]
2017
December
[
5
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November
[
4
]
October
[
3
]
September
[
9
]
July
[
5
]
June
[
2
]
May
[
4
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April
[
6
]
March
[
6
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February
[
7
]
2016
December
[
7
]
November
[
5
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October
[
3
]
September
[
7
]
August
[
1
]
July
[
7
]
May
[
8
]
April
[
7
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March
[
4
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February
[
2
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January
[
5
]
2015
November
[
4
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October
[
5
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September
[
5
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August
[
4
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July
[
3
]
June
[
19
]
May
[
5
]
April
[
1
]
March
[
5
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February
[
9
]
January
[
3
]
2014
November
[
2
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October
[
5
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September
[
4
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August
[
6
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July
[
8
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June
[
1
]
May
[
3
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March
[
8
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February
[
3
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January
[
4
]
2013
December
[
5
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November
[
2
]
October
[
4
]
September
[
4
]
August
[
3
]
July
[
3
]
June
[
5
]
May
[
7
]
March
[
18
]
February
[
1
]
January
[
1
]
2012
December
[
6
]
November
[
1
]
October
[
4
]
September
[
4
]
August
[
7
]
July
[
2
]
June
[
1
]
May
[
2
]
April
[
7
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March
[
6
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February
[
7
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January
[
13
]
2011
December
[
3
]
November
[
1
]
October
[
7
]
August
[
9
]
July
[
3
]
June
[
7
]
May
[
3
]
March
[
6
]
February
[
8
]
January
[
6
]
2010
December
[
4
]
November
[
1
]
October
[
6
]
September
[
1
]
August
[
6
]
July
[
6
]
May
[
5
]
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Review Article:
Virtual blood bank
Kit Fai Wong
J Pathol Inform
2011, 2:6 (29 January 2011)
DOI
:10.4103/2153-3539.76155
PMID
:21383930
Virtual blood bank is the computer-controlled, electronically linked information management system that allows online ordering and real-time, remote delivery of blood for transfusion. It connects the site of testing to the point of care at a remote site in a real-time fashion with networked computers thus maintaining the integrity of immunohematology test results. It has taken the advantages of information and communication technologies to ensure the accuracy of patient, specimen and blood component identification and to enhance personnel traceability and system security. The built-in logics and process constraints in the design of the virtual blood bank can guide the selection of appropriate blood and minimize transfusion risk. The quality of blood inventory is ascertained and monitored, and an audit trail for critical procedures in the transfusion process is provided by the paperless system. Thus, the virtual blood bank can help ensure that the right patient receives the right amount of the right blood component at the right time.
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View Point:
Informatics research using publicly available pathology data
Jules J Berman
J Pathol Inform
2011, 2:5 (29 January 2011)
DOI
:10.4103/2153-3539.76154
PMID
:21383929
The day has not arrived when pathology departments freely distribute their collected anatomic and clinical data for research purposes. Nonetheless, several valuable public domain data sets are currently available, from the U.S. Government. Two public data sets of special interest to pathologists are the SEER (the U.S. National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results program) public use data files, and the CDC (Center for Disease Control and Prevention) mortality files. The SEER files contain about 4 million de-identified cancer records, dating from 1973. The CDC mortality files contain approximately 85 million de-identified death records, dating from 1968. This editorial briefly describes both data sources, how they can be obtained, and how they may be used for pathology research.
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Editorial:
The 13
th
world congress on medical and health informatics, Cape Town, South Africa: Partnerships for effective e-Health solutions
Andrew Georgiou
J Pathol Inform
2011, 2:4 (29 January 2011)
DOI
:10.4103/2153-3539.76152
PMID
:21383928
The 13
th
World Congress on Medical and Health Informatics (Medinfo) was held in 2010 between 12 and 15 September in Cape Town, South Africa. This triennial international gathering is the official conference of the International Medical Informatics Association (IMIA) and brings together leading health informatics leaders, scientists, clinicians, researchers, vendors, developers and government and health care planners from around the globe. The conference attracted 905 submissions and resulted in a program that included 260 oral presentations, 349 posters presentations and 21 scientific demonstrations representing contributions from 58 countries. The Medinfo program covered all aspects of health informatics from traditional areas, such as hospital information systems, patient registries, nursing informatics, data integration, standards, interoperability issues and decision support, to innovative topics, such as translational bioinformatics, text mining, intelligent data analysis, emerging technologies, quality, social networking, workflow and organizational issues. The outgoing President of the IMIA, Professor Reinhold Haux, presented on health informatics challenges into the future, reinforcing that today and in the future, health care has to be considered as part of a continuous and coordinated life-time journey and not just as episodes of disease. Medical informatics has a key role to play in this paradigm shift. The new IMIA President, Professor Antoine Geissbuhler, was announced at the closing ceremony. The next Medinfo congress will take place in Copenhagen, Denmark, in September 2013.
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Review Article:
Contemporary issues in transfusion medicine informatics
Gaurav Sharma, Anil V Parwani, Jay S Raval, Darrell J Triulzi, Richard J Benjamin, Liron Pantanowitz
J Pathol Inform
2011, 2:3 (7 January 2011)
DOI
:10.4103/2153-3539.74961
PMID
:21383927
The Transfusion Medicine Service (TMS) covers diverse clinical and laboratory-based services that must be delivered with accuracy, efficiency and reliability. TMS oversight is shared by multiple regulatory agencies that cover product manufacturing and validation standards geared toward patient safety. These demands present significant informatics challenges. Over the past few decades, TMS information systems have improved to better handle blood product manufacturing, inventory, delivery, tracking and documentation. Audit trails and access to electronic databases have greatly facilitated product traceability and biovigilance efforts. Modern blood bank computing has enabled novel applications such as the electronic crossmatch, kiosk-based blood product delivery systems, and self-administered computerized blood donor interview and eligibility determination. With increasing use of barcoding technology, there has been a marked improvement in patient and specimen identification. Moreover, the emergence of national and international labeling standards such as ISBT 128 have facilitated the availability, movement and tracking of blood products across national and international boundaries. TMS has only recently begun to leverage the electronic medical record to address quality issues in transfusion practice and promote standardized documentation within institutions. With improved technology, future growth is expected in blood bank automation and product labeling with applications such as radio frequency identification devices. This article reviews several of these key informatics issues relevant to the contemporary practice of TMS.
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Review Article:
Quantification of virtual slides: Approaches to analysis of content-based image information
Klaus Kayser
J Pathol Inform
2011, 2:2 (7 January 2011)
DOI
:10.4103/2153-3539.74945
PMID
:21383926
Virtual microscopy, which is the diagnostic work on completely digitized histological and cytological slides as well as blood smears, is at the stage to be implemented in routine diagnostic surgical pathology (tissue-based diagnosis) in the near future, once it has been accepted by the US Food and Drug Administration. The principle of content-based image information, its mandatory prerequisites to obtain reproducible and stable image information as well as the different compartments that contribute to image information are described in detail. Automated extraction of content-based image information requires shading correction, constant maximum of grey values, and standardized grey value histograms. The different compartments to evaluate image information include objects, structure, and texture. Identification of objects and derived structure depend on segmentation accuracy and applied procedures; textures contain pixel-based image information only. All together, these image compartments posses the discrimination power to distinguish between object space and background, and, in addition, to reproducibly define regions of interest (ROIs). ROIs are image areas which display the information that is of preferable interest to the viewing pathologist. They contribute to the derived diagnosis to a higher level when compared with other image areas. The implementation of content-based image information algorithms to be applied for predictive tissue-based diagnoses is described in detail.
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Research Article:
Barriers and facilitators to adoption of soft copy interpretation from the user perspective: Lessons learned from filmless radiology for slideless pathology
Emily S Patterson, Mike Rayo, Carolina Gill, Metin N Gurcan
J Pathol Inform
2011, 2:1 (7 January 2011)
DOI
:10.4103/2153-3539.74940
PMID
:21383925
Background:
Adoption of digital images for pathological specimens has been slower than adoption of digital images in radiology, despite a number of anticipated advantages for digital images in pathology. In this paper, we explore the factors that might explain this slower rate of adoption.
Materials and Method:
Semi-structured interviews on barriers and facilitators to the adoption of digital images were conducted with two radiologists, three pathologists, and one pathologist's assistant.
Results:
Barriers and facilitators to adoption of digital images were reported in the areas of performance, workflow-efficiency, infrastructure, integration with other software, and exposure to digital images. The primary difference between the settings was that performance with the use of digital images as compared to the traditional method was perceived to be higher in radiology and lower in pathology. Additionally, exposure to digital images was higher in radiology than pathology, with some radiologists exclusively having been trained and/or practicing with digital images. The integration of digital images both improved and reduced efficiency in routine and non-routine workflow patterns in both settings, and was variable across the different organizations. A comparison of these findings with prior research on adoption of other health information technologies suggests that the barriers to adoption of digital images in pathology are relatively tractable.
Conclusions:
Improving performance using digital images in pathology would likely accelerate adoption of innovative technologies that are facilitated by the use of digital images, such as electronic imaging databases, electronic health records, double reading for challenging cases, and computer-aided diagnostic systems.
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© Journal of Pathology Informatics | Published by Wolters Kluwer -
Medknow
Online since 10
th
March, 2010