Research on health informatics at Kaiser Permanente Washington focuses on developing and using health information technology (IT) to transform health care delivery. By testing new paradigms of care that provide more opportunities to engage patients, this research is supplying valuable evidence that is helping shape federal policy and guiding innovative redesign of health care.
“We’re working to understand how to make health IT practical so patients and care teams find it useful and engaging,” explained Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute (KPWHRI) Senior Investigator James Ralston, MD, MPH. “We want to find ways to use information technologies to support patients and providers together, both inside and outside the office.”
Integral to this support is designing technologies that are user-friendly and meet the needs of both patients and providers. By applying human-centered methods that focus on needs, use, and usability, KPWHRI researchers inform the design of health IT with direct participation from users.
Groundbreaking methodological work by KPWHRI health informatics researchers includes developing natural language processing (NLP) to analyze text such as notes and written reports in electronic health records (EHRs). Assistant Investigator David Carrell, PhD, leads in the area of using NLP and machine learning to identify patient phenotypes, or specific health characteristics such as possible heart disease, risk of opioid overdose, or suggestion of colon cancer. This information can assist researchers in studying how genetics and other factors influence disease.
Other examples of KPWHRI health informatics research include projects using EHRs and secure electronic communications such as:
Examples of KPWHRI research in mobile health (mHealth) and user-centered design include:
“Our studies on using health IT to improve care are showing that we can achieve better outcomes when we shift care from the doctor’s office to where people live: in their homes—and online,” said Senior Investigator Beverly B. Green, MD, MPH.
Boyd MR, Lewis CC, Scott K, Krendl A, Lyon AR The creation and validation of the Measure of Effective Attributes of Trainers (MEAT) 2017 Jun 2;12(1):73. doi: 10.1186/s13012-017-0603-y. Epub 2017-06-02. PubMed
Demb J, Chu P, Nelson T, Hall D, Seibert A, Lamba R, Boone J, Krishnam M, Cagnon C, Bostani M, Gould R, Miglioretti D, Smith-Bindman R Optimizing Radiation Doses for Computed Tomography Across Institutions: Dose Auditing and Best Practices 2017 Jun;177(6):810-817. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2017.0445. PubMed
Berry ABL, Lim C, Hartzler AL, Hirsch T, Ludman E, Wagner EH, Ralston JD Creating Conditions for Patients' Values to Emerge in Clinical Conversations: Perspectives of Health Care Team Members 2017 Jun;2017:1165-1174. doi: 10.1145/3064663.3064669. PubMed
Hubbard RA, Johnson E, Chubak J, Wernli KJ, Kamineni A, Bogart A, Rutter CM Accounting for misclassification in electronic health records-derived exposures using generalized linear finite mixture models 2017 Jun;17(2):101-112. doi: 10.1007/s10742-016-0149-5. Epub 2016-06-03. PubMed
Glass JE, McKay JR, Gustafson DH, Kornfield R, Rathouz PJ, McTavish FM, Atwood AK, Isham A, Quanbeck A, Shah D Treatment seeking as a mechanism of change in a randomized controlled trial of a mobile health intervention to support recovery from alcohol use disorders 2017 Jun;77:57-66. doi: 10.1016/j.jsat.2017.03.011. Epub 2017-03-30. PubMed
Claire Allen, MPHManager, Collaborative Science |
Katharine A. Bradley, MD, MPHSenior Investigator |
Yates Coley, PhDAssociate Biostatistics Investigator |
Beverly B. Green, MD, MPHSenior Investigator |
Annie Hoopes, MD, MPHAssistant Investigator |
Paula Lozano, MD, MPHSenior Investigator; Director, ACT Center |
James D. Ralston, MD, MPHSenior Investigator |
Brian D. Williamson, PhDAssociate Biostatistics Investigator |