Databases for clinical psychiatry.

B H Guze, S Duim, M T McGuire, D Moreau, E Poster
Author Information
  1. B H Guze: UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute and Hospital 90024, USA.

Abstract

Clinical information systems support patient care and research while providing data for administrative use. We assessed the informational needs of the psychiatrists at UCLA Neuropsychiatric Hospital and used the resulting criteria in evaluating commercial computer products. The systems that appear to be least expensive, most powerful, and most suitable for widespread use are assembled from various off-the-shelf packages. These newer systems use a structured query language (SQL) database with a graphic user interface. An SQL database can support both large and small clinical operations, and a graphic interface is easy to use. Commercial software systems are too expensive for a small psychiatric hospital or department, but a customized SQL database can be purchased and installed at lower cost.

MeSH Term

Computer Graphics
Feasibility Studies
Hospital Records
Humans
Information Systems
Medical Records Systems, Computerized
Psychiatry
Software
User-Computer Interface

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0systemsuseSQLdatabasesupportexpensivegraphicinterfacecansmallclinicalClinicalinformationpatientcareresearchprovidingdataadministrativeassessedinformationalneedspsychiatristsUCLANeuropsychiatricHospitalusedresultingcriteriaevaluatingcommercialcomputerproductsappearleastpowerfulsuitablewidespreadassembledvariousoff-the-shelfpackagesnewerstructuredquerylanguageuserlargeoperationseasyCommercialsoftwarepsychiatrichospitaldepartmentcustomizedpurchasedinstalledlowercostDatabasespsychiatry

Similar Articles

Cited By