Uri Kartoun, Kathleen E. Corey, et al.
PLoS ONE
Electronic medical records (EMRs) contain sensitive and detailed documentation on a variety of conditions at the individual level. Because EMRs are subject to confidentiality requirements, access to them is limited. In an attempt to address privacy limitations, knowledge-driven experimental artificially generated electronic medical records (EMRBots) have been introduced. EMRBot repositories have been used in a variety of scenarios to advance teaching, enhance student dissertations, facilitate hackathons, and produce R packages. In addition to describing its methodology, the manuscript reviews EMRBot use cases published by independent researchers.
Uri Kartoun, Kathleen E. Corey, et al.
PLoS ONE
Paul C. Tang, Sarah Miller, et al.
JAMIA
Jacqueline S. Dron, Minxian Wang, et al.
Circulation: Genomic and Precision Medicine
Uri Kartoun
Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy