Jamie J Coleman
University of Birmingham
141 Papers
329 Citations
Jamie J Coleman is an academic researcher from University of Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electronic prescribing & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 132 publications. Previous affiliations of Jamie J Coleman include Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust & University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust.
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Papers
Evaluation of medium-term consequences of implementing commercial computerized physician order entry and clinical decision support prescribing systems in two ‘early adopter’ hospitals
Kathrin Cresswell,David W. Bates,Robin Williams,Zoe Morrison,Ann Slee,Jamie J Coleman,Ann Robertson,Aziz Sheikh +7 more
TL;DR: To understand the medium-term consequences of implementing commercially procured computerized physician order entry (CPOE) and clinical decision support (CDS) systems in 'early adopter' hospitals, an in-depth, qualitative case study in two hospitals using a CPOE or a CDS system for at least 2 years is conducted.
Clinical decision support systems in the care of inpatients with diabetes in non-critical care setting: systematic review.
TL;DR: In this article, the use of clinical decision support systems in improving the care of hospitalized patients with diabetes in a non-critical care setting and to assess their effectiveness was evaluated and found that they may have a beneficial effect, but this need further confirmation.
Temporal and other factors that influence the time doctors take to prescribe using an electronic prescribing system.
TL;DR: The display of alerts, prescribing experience, system familiarity, and environment all affect the time taken to generate a prescription order, reinforcing the need for appropriate alerts to be presented to individuals at an appropriate place in the workflow, in order to improve prescribing efficiency.
Effects of a computerized feedback intervention on safety performance by junior doctors: results from a randomized mixed method study
Sabi Redwood,Nothando B Ngwenya,Nothando B Ngwenya,James Hodson,Robin E Ferner,Jamie J Coleman,Jamie J Coleman +6 more
TL;DR: There is only weak evidence that a clinical dashboard providing individualized feedback data has the potential to improve safety behaviour and only in one of several domains.
Health alliance for prudent prescribing and yield of antibiotics in a patient-centred perspective (HAPPY PATIENT): a before-and-after intervention and implementation study protocol
A.D. Bjerrum,Ana García-Sangenís,Daniela Modena,Gloria Cordoba,Lars Bjerrum,Athina Chalkidou,Jesper Lykkegaard,Malene Plejdrup Hansen,Jens Søndergaard,Jørgen Nexøe,Ingrid Keilegavlen Rebnord,Isabel Sebjørnsen,Jette Nygaard Jensen,Matilde Bøgelund Hansen,Katja Taxis,Maarten Lambert,Ria Benko,Beatriz González López-Valcárcel,Fabiana Raynal,Nieves Barragán,Pia Touboul,Pascale Bruno,Ruta Radzeviciene,Lina Jaruseviciene,Auste Bandzaite,Maciek Godycki-Cwirko,Anna Kowalczyk,Christos Lionis,Maria-Nefeli Karkana,Marilena Anastasaki,Jamie J Coleman,Helena Glasova,Michiel A. van Agtmael,Pierre Tattevin,Alicia Borras,Carl Llor +35 more
TL;DR: The Happy Patient project as discussed by the authors is an EU-funded project aimed at contributing to the battle against antibiotic resistance through improvement of the quality of management of common community-acquired infections based on interventions by different types of healthcare professionals.