From ICD9-CM to MeSH using the UMLS: a how-to guide. (41/44)

One purpose of the Unified Medical Language System (UMLS) is to facilitate conversion of terms from one controlled medical vocabulary to another. We examined our ability to convert International Classification of Diseases, 9th Edition, Clinical Modifications (ICD9-CM) to Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) using the UMLS. We describe a method which mapped 30.4% of ICD9-CM to UMLS. Of these, 95.0% were linked to MeSH, of which translation was straightforward in 90.4%. We discuss the use of these translations for retrieval from MeSH-indexed databases, such as Medline.  (+info)

The reorganization of a monographic reference collection. (42/44)

Reference monographs in the Health Sciences Library of the College of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey were reorganized recently according to form, in order to enable both librarians and patrons to utilize these materials more efficiently. This reorganization reflects the unique characteristics of reference books as differentiated from the regular monographic collection, since reference materials are frequently consulted for quick "look-ups." A reference category scheme was developed and implemented, based on observations of and comparisons with reference collections of eight medical libraries in the New York metropolitan area. The reorganization enhances the retrievability of materials from this collection.  (+info)

DXplain on the Internet. (43/44)

DXplain, a computer-based medical education, reference and decision support system has been used by thousands of physicians and medical students on stand-alone systems and over communications networks. For the past two years, we have made DXplain available over the Internet in order to provide DXplain's knowledge and analytical capabilities as a resource to other applications within Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and at outside institutions. We describe and provide the user experience with two different protocols through which users can access DXplain through the World Wide Web (WWW). The first allows the user to have direct interaction with all the functionality of DXplain where the MGH server controls the interaction and the mode of presentation. In the second mode, the MGH server provides the DXplain functionality as a series of services, which can be called independently by the user application program.  (+info)

Peer reviewing and curating the health care information infrastructure: experiences and recommendations. (44/44)

As part of a digital health sciences library's continuous quality improvement process, a digital textbook of common medical problems was created which contained links to authoritative medical information on the Internet for patients and health care providers. The accomplishments of this project were the: 1) Identification of 50 common medical problems, 2) Development of a methodology for identifying authoritative medical information related to these problems, 3) Creation of a digital textbook containing links to this information with a problem-based interface, 4) Development of a methodology to allow local peer review of this information, and 5) Evaluation of the use of the information and the local peer review methodology.  (+info)