ABSTRACT

In an age when electronic health records (EHRs) are an increasingly important source of data, this essential textbook provides both practical and theoretical guidance to researchers conducting epidemiological or clinical analysis through EHRs.

Split into three parts, the book covers the research journey from start to finish. Part 1 focuses on the challenges inherent when working with EHRs, from access to data management, and raising issues such as completeness and accuracy which impact the validity of any research project. Part 2 examines the core research process itself, with chapters on research design, sampling, and analysis, as well as emerging methodological techniques. Part 3 demonstrates how EHR research can be made meaningful, from presentation to publication, and includes how findings can be applied to real-world issues of public health.

Supported by case studies throughout, and applicable across a range of research software programs (including R, SPSS, and SAS), this is the ideal text for students and researchers engaging with EHRs across epidemiological and clinical research.

part |34 pages

Introduction

chapter 21|12 pages

The Rise of Electronic Health Records

part Section I|106 pages

EHR Data for Research

chapter 4|29 pages

Accessing Electronic Health Record Data

chapter 5|30 pages

Data Management

chapter 6|26 pages

Perils of Electronic Health Record Data

part Section II|170 pages

Epidemiology and Data Analysis

chapter 1427|27 pages

Study Design and Sampling Strategies

chapter 8|19 pages

Epidemiologic Measures

chapter 10|22 pages

Epidemiologic Analysis I

chapter 11|30 pages

Epidemiologic Analysis II

part Section III|48 pages

Interpretation to Application

chapter 31213|20 pages

Publication and Presentation