Doug Redd
George Washington University
31 Papers
140 Citations
Doug Redd is an academic researcher from George Washington University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Computer science & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 28 publications. Previous affiliations of Doug Redd include Ohio State University & Veterans Health Administration.
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Papers
•Proceedings Article
Ginkgo and Warfarin Interaction in a Large Veterans Administration Population.
Gregory J. Stoddard,Melissa Archer,Laura Shane-McWhorter,Bruce E. Bray,Doug Redd,Joshua Proulx,Qing Zeng-Treitler +6 more
- 05 Nov 2015
TL;DR: Taking concurrently with warfarin, gingko does significantly increase patients' risk of a bleeding adverse event and a large medical record databaseto confirm a suspected herb-drug interaction is confirmed.
41
A 2D crossover–based map of the human X chromosome as a model for map integration
Pamela R. Fain,Edward N. Kort,Phillip F. Chance,K. Nguyen,Doug Redd,Michael J. Econs,David F. Barker +6 more
TL;DR: This first high–density crossover–based map of an entire human chromosome provides a model for integrating physical and genetic maps and produces maps with greater reliability and higher resolution than maps constructed using currently accepted standards.
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Characterizing Clinical Text and Sublanguage: A Case Study of the VA Clinical Notes
TL;DR: There are a relatively large number of sublanguages and variance both within and between document types and these findings will guide NLP development to create more customizable and generalizable solutions across medical domains and subl languages.
Identifying Axial Spondyloarthritis in Electronic Medical Records of US Veterans
Jessica A. Walsh,Yijun Shao,Jianwei Leng,Tao He,Chia Chen Teng,Doug Redd,Qing Treitler Zeng,Zachary Burningham,Daniel O. Clegg,Brian C. Sauer +9 more
TL;DR: The authors developed methods for identifying axial spondyloarthritis (SpA) concepts in the free text of documents from electronic medical records using natural language processing (NLP) tools.
28
Criticality: A New Concept of Severity of Illness for Hospitalized Children.
Eduardo A Trujillo Rivera,Anita K. Patel,James M. Chamberlain,T. Elizabeth Workman,Julia A Heneghan,Doug Redd,Hiroki Morizono,Dongkyu Kim,James E. Bost,Murray M. Pollack +9 more
TL;DR: The Criticality Index is a quantification of severity of illness for hospitalized children using physiology, therapy, and care intensity and is applicable to clinical investigations and predicting future care needs.
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