Radcliffe Cardiology, Jordan Rance; Special Editor: Greg Guillory

About

Computers are the necessary substrate for everything that occurs in cardiology, yet computer technology has been implemented in a piecemeal manner.

In order to utilise the enormous capacities that computers offer in handling complex medical information, the data elements must be precisely defined and stored in a uniform manner. In cardiology, national professional societies, led by the American College of Cardiology, are developing data standards along with necessary technical specifications that will help achieve the desired goal of a fully interoperable health information network.

Articles

Heart Hospitals, Medicare, and Cross-subsidization

Citation:

American Heart Hospital Journal 2009;7(2):94–8

Just Say 'No' to Soylent Green Medicine—You'll Be Glad You Did

Citation:

American Heart Hospital Journal 2009;7(2):106–8

Telemonitoring in Heart Failure Rehabilitation

Citation:

European Cardiology 2011;7(1):66–9

The Ohio State University Richard M Ross Heart Hospital-Proof of Concept-Five Years of Growth and Development

Citation:

American Heart Hospital Journal 2009;7(1):21–6