Canopy Computing
- 21 October 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA)
- Vol. 280 (15) , 1325-1329
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.280.15.1325
Abstract
The rain forest canopy is a seamless web through which arboreal creatures efficiently move to reach the edible fruits without any atttention to the individual trees. Individual health care computer systems are rich with patient data, but rather than a canopy linking all the trees in the forest, the data "fruit" come from a diverse forest of individual computer "trees"—laboratory systems, word processing systems, pharmacy systems, and the like. These different sources of patient information are difficult or impossible to reach by individual physicians, especially from their offices. The World Wide Web and other standardization technology provide physicians and their institutions the tools needed for seamless and secure access to their patients' data and to medical information, when and where they need it. We and others have adopted these tools to combine independent sources of clinical data. Physicians who assist in the purchase of clinical information systems should demand products in their practice settings that are Web enabled, use standard coding systems, and communicate with other computer systems via broadly accepted protocols.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- A network of web multimedia medical information servers for a Medical School and University HospitalInternational Journal of Medical Informatics, 1997
- Maintaining the Confidentiality of Medical Records Shared over the Internet and the World Wide WebAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1997
- Using the technology of the world wide web to manage clinical informationBMJ, 1997
- The Barriers to Electronic Medical Record Systems and How to Overcome ThemJournal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 1997
- Internet as Clinical Information System: Application Development Using the World Wide WebJournal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 1995
- Using routinely collected data for clinical researchStatistics in Medicine, 1991
- The analysis of humongous databases: Problems and promisesStatistics in Medicine, 1991
- Using databases to evaluate therapyStatistics in Medicine, 1991
- Reminders to Physicians from an Introspective Computer Medical RecordAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1984
- Medical Intensive Care: Indications, Interventions, and OutcomesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1980