Published on in Vol 9, No 1 (2017): Jan-Dec 2017

Should Hospital Patients Have Bedside Access to Their Complete Medical Records?

Should Hospital Patients Have Bedside Access to Their Complete Medical Records?

Should Hospital Patients Have Bedside Access to Their Complete Medical Records?

Authors of this article:

Lisa V Grossman1 ;   Susan Restaino1 ;   David Vawdrey1

Journals

  1. Manias E, Gray K, Wickramasinghe N, Manojlovich M. Using electronic medical records to create big data and to communicate with patients—Is there room for both?. Collegian 2018;25(4):467 View
  2. Alpert J, Morris B, Thomson M, Matin K, Geyer C, Brown R. OpenNotes in oncology: oncologists’ perceptions and a baseline of the content and style of their clinician notes. Translational Behavioral Medicine 2019;9(2):347 View
  3. Asan O, Scanlon M, Crotty B, Holden R, Flynn K. Parental Perceptions of Displayed Patient Data in a PICU: An Example of Unintentional Empowerment*. Pediatric Critical Care Medicine 2019;20(5):435 View
  4. Hamze M, Joshi S, Li Y, Repp A, Jacobs A, McEntee R. 21st Century Cures Act: Inpatient Clinician Perceptions of Changes to Information Sharing at an Academic Medical Center. SSRN Electronic Journal 2022 View
  5. Hamze M, Joshi S, Li Y, Repp A, Jacobs A, McEntee R. The 21st Century Cures Act: Inpatient Clinician Perceptions of Changes to Information Sharing at an Academic Medical Center. Cureus 2023 View
  6. Schmidt S, Boulton A, Butler B, Fazio T. Enabling awareness, agency and participation: Haematology patient experiences of an (in)patient portal's information affordances. DIGITAL HEALTH 2024;10 View