Surendra Sarnikar

Surendra Sarnikar is an Associate Professor in Information Systems at the College of Business and Information Systems, Dakota State University. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Engineering from Osmania University, India, and a PhD in Management Information Systems from the University of Arizona. He teaches healthcare informatics, design research and knowledge management at the Dakota State University and has published several conference and journal publications in the area of knowledge management systems, information retrieval and healthcare information systems.

Publications

Cases on Healthcare Information Technology for Patient Care Management
Surendra Sarnikar, Dorine Bennett, Mark Gaynor. © 2013. 349 pages.
Health care organizations have made investments in health information technologies such as electronic health records, health information exchanges, and many more, which have...
Using Machine Learning Techniques in Student Dropout Prediction
Rajeev Bukralia, Amit V. Deokar, Surendra Sarnikar, Mark Hawkes. © 2012. 15 pages.
This chapter outlines a case of identifying students at-risk of dropping out of online courses by using institutional research data. The case delineates this step-by-step process...
Extending Workflows for Knowledge Flow Automation
Surendra Sarnikar, J. Leon Zhao. © 2012. 13 pages.
Effective execution of business processes also requires the provisioning of relevant knowledge to workers in various business contexts. Knowledge flow automation aims to enable...
A Risk Assessment Framework for Inter-Organizational Knowledge Sharing
Ruba Aljafari, Surendra Sarnikar. © 2012. 16 pages.
Internet-based information, communication, and collaboration technologies are making it easier for organizations and knowledge workers to collaborate across organizational...
An Information Technology Architecture for Drug Effectiveness Reporting and Post-Marketing Surveillance
Amar Gupta, Raymond Woosley, Igor Crk, Surendra Sarnikar. © 2011. 15 pages.
Adverse drug events impose a large cost on the society in terms of lives and healthcare costs. In this chapter, the authors propose an information technology architecture for...