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Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

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Health Information Technology

Series

2015

Surgery

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Robotic Joint Replacement Surgery: Does Technology Improve Outcomes, Chelsea Hill, Reem El-Bash, Leslie Johnson, Alberto Coustasse Jun 2015

Robotic Joint Replacement Surgery: Does Technology Improve Outcomes, Chelsea Hill, Reem El-Bash, Leslie Johnson, Alberto Coustasse

Management Faculty Research

Introduction: Osteoarthritis is a common disease that leads patients to seek Total Joint Replacement (TJR). Component misalignments leads to failure of TJR. Computer navigation enhances the precision of component alignment, but the addition of robotic guidance, can boost TJR to a higher level of accuracy.

Methodology: This literature reviewed 29 English language peer reviewed articles from 2002 – 2013 and one website. A conceptual framework was adapted to explain benefits and barriers of adoption of robotic TJR.

Results: A total of ten studies were reviewed with focus on more precise alignment, outcomes, length of stay, and costs. Cost to obtain …


Development And Pilot Feasibility Study Of A Health Information Technology Tool To Calculate Mortality Risk For Patients With Asymptomatic Carotid Stenosis: The Carotid Risk Assessment Tool (Carat), Adrienne E. Faerber, Rebecca Horvath, Carey Stillman, Melissa L. O'Connell, Amy L. Hamilton, Karina A. Newhall, Donald S. Likosky, Philip P. Goodney Mar 2015

Development And Pilot Feasibility Study Of A Health Information Technology Tool To Calculate Mortality Risk For Patients With Asymptomatic Carotid Stenosis: The Carotid Risk Assessment Tool (Carat), Adrienne E. Faerber, Rebecca Horvath, Carey Stillman, Melissa L. O'Connell, Amy L. Hamilton, Karina A. Newhall, Donald S. Likosky, Philip P. Goodney

Dartmouth Scholarship

Patients with no history of stroke but with stenosis of the carotid arteries can reduce the risk of future stroke with surgery or stenting. At present, a physicians’ ability to recommend optimal treatments based on an individual’s risk profile requires estimating the likelihood that a patient will have a poor peri-operative outcomes and the likelihood that the patient will survive long enough to gain benefit from the procedure. We describe the development of the CArotid Risk Assessment Tool (CARAT) into a 2-year mortality risk calculator within the electronic medical record, integrating the tool into the clinical workflow, training the clinical …