Title: Information Systems in Health Care
1Information Systems in Health Care
- Yung-Fu Chen, Ph.D.
- Department of Health Services Management, China
Medical University
2Learning Objectives
- Distinguish between the concepts of data,
information, and knowledge and give examples of
each - Describe the evolution of IS in health-care
delivery - Discuss how the management of IS in health-care
facilities has changed over time and how this has
affected the development of IT in health-care
delivery - Distinguish between in-house developed, shared,
turnkey, and stand-alone IS - Provide examples of clinical and administrative
IS - Discuss the elements of a HIS
- Discuss current trends in health-care IS
3Key Terms
- Administrative and managerial information
systems - Computer-based patient record (CPR)
- Data
- Hospital information system (HIS)
- Information
- In-house systems
- Knowledge
- Laboratory information systems (LIS)
- Nursing information systems (NIS)
- Patient monitoring systems
- Pharmacy information systems
- Shared systems
- Stand-alone systems
- Turnkey systems
4Outline
- Information Systems in Health Care
- History of IS in Health Care
- Current Applications and Trends in Health Care
- Current Trends in Health Information Systems
5History of IS in Health Care
- Studied from different standpoints
- Technology
- System design approaches
- Management approaches
- Data-information-knowledge model
- Focus on data-information-knowledge model and
contrast it to other three standpoints
6History of IS in Health CareDistinctions between
data, information, and knowledge
- Data are facts, images, or sounds that may or may
not be useful to a particular task - Non-interpreted items
- A data system only produces facts, images, or
sounds without any contextual basis - Information consists of data or sets of data
whose content or form is useful to a particulat
task - Information systems maintain a long-term database
use applications built on storage, retrieval, and
communication concepts - Data need to be formatted. Filtered, and/or
manipulated in order to be converted to
information
- Data can be converted to information in a number
of ways summarized, highlighted, and formatted
or presented - Knowledge is a combination of rules,
relationships, ideas, and experience - Knowledge systems are usually composed of an
expert knowledge base, algorithms, or some type
of rule-based or decision analysis adjunct. - Diagnostic decision support systems (DDSS), which
provide collegial assistance in making decisions
to the user, are good examples of knowledge
systems
7History of IS in Health CareDistinctions between
data, information, and knowledge
Figure 3-1 Hierarchical view of
data-information-knowledge
- Knowledge
- Rules
- Relationships
- Ideas
- Information
- Formatted
- Filtered
- Manipulated
8History of IS in Health CareEvolution of IS in
Health Care
- 1960s-70s
- Financial Focus
- Few Clinical Systems
- In-house Development
- Shared Systems
- Turnkey Systems
- Transaction Processing
Figure 3-2 Timelining Health Information Systems
Evolution
- 1980s
- Continuing Financial Focus
- More Clinical Development
- Stand-alone Systems
- Distributed Systems
- Management Information Systems
- 1990s
- Focus on Clinical Systems
- Integration of Systems
- Executive Information Systems
- Decision Support Systems
- Enterprise-wide Systems
- Office Automation
- Virtual Systems
- 2000s
- Standards
- E-health
- Intranets and Extranets
- Internet
- Clinical Repositories
- Data Warehouses
- Data Mining
9History of IS in Health CareEvolution of IS in
Health Care
- Financial and Clinical Systems
- Although automation has been occurring since
1960s, IS in health care still remain primarily
paper based - The initial use of computers in health care
occurred during the 1960s and early 1970, but
mostly focused on financial applications - Transferred from other industries to health care
was an lateral movement - The nature, scope, and development of computer
technology then supported data systems better
than IS - Several exemplary applications in the clinical
area
10History of IS in Health CareEvolution of IS in
Health Care
- In-House Developed, Shared, Turnkey, and
Stand-alone System - 1960s-1970s
- In-house systems included on-site systems that
were designed, programmed, supported, and
modified by hospital data processing staff - The advantage is more flexible in meeting
hospital needs than vendor-developed products
- Shared systems included those designed,
programmed, and maintained by a system vendor and
run on computer equipment at the vendor site - Shared by multiple hospitals and communicated
through telephone lines or paper forms - The advantages were low start-up costs, low
technical staffing requirement in the hospital,
and the availability of fully tested and proven
system - The drawback is lack of system flexibility to
meet specific institution needs
11History of IS in Health CareEvolution of IS in
Health Care
- In-House Developed, Shared, Turnkey, and
Stand-alone System - Turnkey systems
- Developed by an information vendor, usually in
only software side of the system - Installed on a hospital computer and operated by
the hospital staff - The hospital could literally just turn the system
on and be ready for business - Attractive to smaller hospitals
- Stand-alone system
- Developed to support functional tasks for
separate departmental areas that each claims
ownership of its data - Usually no attempt to share information among
systems - Lack of system integration
- Data that could be used on an enterprise-wide
basis for decision making were difficult to
provide through this decentralized approach
12History of IS in Health CareEvolution of IS in
Health Care
- In-House Developed, Shared, Turnkey, and
Stand-alone System - Information system types
- TPS, MIS, DSS, EIS, ES, and OAS
- Early systems were mainly TPS that automated
operational functions such as accounting,
payroll, inventory, and admission/discharge
systems order entry system was later added - The introduction of national prospective payment
system for Medicare patients influenced the
growth of MIS - Weakness in linking and integrating data for
stand-alone system became magnified
- In the 1990s, a need for developing EIS and DSS
were manifested by increase of health maintenance
organization, development of alliances, and focus
on managed care - Optical fiber provided faster communication for
both data and images - In the 2000s, progress in system integration has
been promoted - Commitment to the development of standards such
as HL-7, DICOM, and ASTM - Advancement of computer technologies
- Client/server networks, DBMS, DDBMS, GUI, voice
recognition, etc. - Improvements in IS development tools, such as
CASE and RAD
13Current Applications and Trends in Health Care
Clinical Applications and Systems
- Various system types
- Patient monitoring systems
- Nursing information systems
- Laboratory information systems
- Pharmacy information systems
- Other clinically oriented information systems
- There are frequently overlaps in function and
purpose among system types - Broadly defined as hospital information system
(HIS) - Provide communication among health facility
workers and support organization need for
operating, planning, patient care, and
documentation
- Help to handle this complexity by coordinating
work tasks, integrating information, organizing
and storing information, and providing
information decision support through
communication architectures, databases, and
application programs, - HIS should provide the following functions
- Core applications
- Business and financial functions
- Communications and networking
- Departmental management
- Medical documentation
- Medical support
14Current Applications and Trends in Health Care
Clinical Applications and Systems
- Core applications
- Patient scheduling, admission, and discharge
embodied in a registration-admission-discharge-tra
nsfer (RADT) system - Business and financial functions
- Provide traditional functions such as payroll,
general ledger, and accounts receivable - Communications and networking
- HIS is a hub for communication to systems such as
pharmacy, radiology, laboratory, dietary, OR,
housekeeping, and other services - Order entry-results reporting system providing
communication between physician orders and
ancillary unit is another important function of
HIS
- Departmental management
- Supports the internal needs of individual
hospital departments - Integration of individual departmental systems
with core HIS application is a trend - Medical documentation
- Performs the functions of the standard medical
record in collecting, storing, and presenting
clinical information - Supports managerial and administrative decision
making - Medical support
- Assists health-care provider in interpretation of
data and in making clinically related decisios - Data generated, stored, and integrated by various
systems can be used to monitor patients, issue
alerts, and provide limited advice for diagnosis
or therapy - Alert of drug allergies
15Current Applications and Trends in Health Care
Clinical Applications and Systems
- Patient monitoring systems
- Collect, store, interpret, and display
physiological patient data - Critical in helping to detect life-threatening
events - Found in various areas, such as emergency
departments, operating rooms, general acute-care
units, and intensive-care units - Nursing information systems
- Support the nursing-care process both from
clinical and managerial perspectives - Helping nurses in determining diagnosis,
preparing and implementing of nursing-care plans,
and evaluating care that was provided - Supporting nursing management functions including
scheduling of personnel having appropriate level
of education, training, or skill
16Current Applications and Trends in Health Care
Clinical Applications and Systems
- Laboratory information systems
- Support processing of data associated with
laboratory tests and management functions
associated with daily operations - Store, analyze, and distribute data of tests and
examination including clinical chemistry,
hematology, clinical microbiology, cytology,
surgical pathology, and blood bank - Perform test ordering and results reporting,
patient and specimen identification, data
processing and record keeping, data acquisition,
report generation, quality control, and
managerial reporting - Pharmacy information systems
- Collect, store, and manage information related to
drugs and use of drugs in patient care. - Provide medications for patient care in response
to a physicians order is the primary activity
- Provide information regarding identification of
drug-drug interactions, contraindications with
patient allergies, and drug sensitivities - Supported functions include online order entry,
pharmacist review, medication profile update,
label printing, drug-dispensing reports,
medication administration reports, inventory
maintenance and automatic drug reorder, drug-use
reports, and controlled-drug reports - Other clinically oriented information systems
- Radiological information systems
- Dietary information systems
- Emergency department systems
- Support system for central supply, operating room
systems, anesthesia systems, etc.
17Current Applications and Trends in Health Care
Computer-Based Patient Record (CPR)
- A concept of maintaining health-related and
patient-related data electronically in a system
so that end users may access complete and
accurate data, and be provided with alerts,
reminders, clinical support systems, and links to
medical knowledge - A system of technology, software, and data
subsystems working together to provide accurate,
complete, and timely information when and where
it is needed - Make up of one technology but supported by many
technologies - Web-enabling technologies, client/server
networks, fast computing speed, voice
recognition, and DDMS - Multiple data sources are required to support CPR
concept
18Current Applications and Trends in Health Care
Computer-Based Patient Record (CPR)
- CPR requirements
- An integrated view of patient data
- Access to knowledge resources
- Physician and clinician order entry
- Integrated communications support
- Clinical decision support
- Barrier to CPR Development
- Lack of a clear definition of a CPR and costs and
risks associated with development - Barriers to diffusion including
- Fragmented organization of the health-care system
- Lack of leadership for establishing the necessary
infrastructure for national CPR implementation - Requirements for education and training of
health-care personnel - CPR adoption costs
- Legal and social issues
- Lack of a communications infrastructure and
standards
- Current status of CPR
- Development of integration among a variety of
independent systems, such as pharmacy,
laboratory, radiology, and nursing information
systems, is a trend - Integration involves the application of
client/server protocols, DDMS, and application of
vocabulary and other types of standard - Work on defining the basic architecture for data
contained in the CPR needs to be accomplished if
data are to be seamlessly transmitted among
health-care providers, internal and external to
the organization - Computer-Based Patient Record Institute (CPRI)
has established the Nicholas E. Davies Annual CPR
Recognition Symposia
19Current Applications and Trends in Health Care
Administrative and Management Applications
- The applications, especially in the financial
areas, were the first functions widely deployed - Clinical and financial systems were rarely
integrated, also poor integration among various
managerial and administrative systems - Lack of appropriate integration has adverse
impact on decision making
- Examples
- Financial information system
- Accounting information system
- Human resource MIS
- Material management systems
- Facilities MIS
- Management planning and decision support systems
20Current Trends in Health Information Systems
Administrative and Management Applications
- Financial information system
- Initially automated accounting functions such as
payroll preparation, accounts payable, patient
accounting, general ledger, and budgeting with
the implementation of DRG the need for case-mix
management systems and integration of clinical
and financial systems were recognized - Categorization
- Cash management
- Investment management
- Capital budgeting
- Financial forecasting and planning
- Accounting information system
- Essential business operations that record
organizational business and economic transactions
by recording and reporting how funds flow through
the organization, producing financial statement
- A mix of different systems
- Order processing system captures and process
order - Inventory control system processes data related
to inventory and inventory tracking - Account receivable system records the amounts
owed by health-care facility patients, clients,
clients, and produce invoices, monthly
statements, and credit management reports - Account payable system records the purchases, the
amount of purchases, and from whom purchases were
made - Payroll transaction system includes mechanisms
for timekeeping for work performed, records
employee compensation data, and produces paycheck
and other payroll documents - General ledger system glues all of the accounting
systems together
21Current Trends in Health Information Systems
Administrative and Management Applications
- Human resource MIS
- Traditional functions include only maintaining
and updating employee records, currently access
to data for monitoring productivity, assessing
personnel-related barriers to productivity, and
determining appropriate levels of the human
resources mix are implemented - Be able to support three important functions
- Staff administration supports recording and
tracking of human resources - Training administration helps managers to plan
and monitor employee training and to develop and
analyze the success of training programs - Development and compensation administration
analyze the range and distribution of employee
compensation including wages, salaries,
incentives, and fringe benefits internal and
external to the organization
- Material management systems
- Management of inventory and purchasing of
materials and supplies - Encompasses front-end and back-end processes
- Front-end processes involve handling requisitions
for supplies and materials from departments - Back-end process include managing inventory and
ordering materials and supplies - Benefits of this system
- Reductions in inventory
- Improvement in bid and contracting procedures
- Updating of daily patient charges
- Improvements in avoiding lost patient charges
- interface with accounts payable to obtain
payment discounts - Reduction in labor costs
22Current Trends in Health Information Systems
Administrative and Management Applications
- Facilities MIS
- Well-maintained physical facilities are essential
for the provision of quality patient care as well
as providing a pleasing atmosphere for workers
and patients and their families - Include capture, storage, and manipulation of
data used to monitor preventive maintenance,
energy management, and project (construction)
scheduling - Management planning and decision support systems
- Information from external and internal is
necessary for good strategic decision making
- External prospective
- Understand the environmental context, know the
strength and weakness of its competition, and
understand opportunities upon which it can
capitalize - Internal prospective
- Recognize its own internal strengths and weakness
and how these decision making must integrate data
from internal and external database - DSS provides information for strategic decision
making by supplying tools for the manipulation of
data and presenting answers to what-if scenarios - DSS includes forecasting, marketing, cost
accounting, and case-mix systems - Quality improvement systems
23Current Trends in Health Information Systems
Administrative and Management Applications
- Elements of management information, decision
support, and executive information systems - IS designed to help in the support of strategic
and managerial decision making are classified
into three categories MIS, DSS, and EID - Management information systems
- Developed for managing daily business operations
- Exception report is generated when exceptional
conditions occur - Some allow managers to interactively request
information through Web browser, query languages,
and report generators
- Decision support systems
- Include more sophisticated features for analysis
of data than MIS - Consist of several characteristics such as a body
of knowledge or a database, analytical models
used to analyze data, and interactive modeling
capability to support semi-structure and
unstructured management decisions - Software for managers to develop their own DSS
spreadsheet, management sciences packages (SPSS
or SAS), query languages, and data mining
packages - Executive information systems
- Combine many features of MIS and DSS, but is
developed for top executive decision making
24Current Trends in Health Information Systems
- Systems can be examined and views in relations to
management of the resources, architecture,
applications, communications, and technology - Vision must be toward fully integrated systems
supported by flexible data models, communication
technologies, and tools that enhance decision
making, improve quality and productivity, and
reduce administrative costs
- Current trends in
- Clinical information systems
- E-commerce and E-health
- Standard development
- Privacy and security
- Technology developments
- Management of information resources and standards
development - The virtual health-care system
25Current Trends in Health Information
SystemsClinical Information System
- Continued design, development, and implementation
of CPR - CPR will require continued development and
application of a number of technologies - Clinical data repositories
- Communication technologies to link various
repositories, information resources, and users - Enterprise-wide and inter-enterprise data models
- Voice entry to improve user input
- AI and DSS
- Communications and other standards
- Integration of voice, text, data, and image
processing systems - Policies, procedures, and methods that will
ensure security of patient-related data and
communications
26Current Trends in Health Information
SystemsE-Commerce and E-Health
- E-commerce can be defined as the marketing,
buying, selling, and support of products and
services over the Internet, Intranet, and
Extranet - E-commerce involves electronic data interchange
(EDI) and secure electronic funds transfer (EFT) - Health-care organization will continue to use the
Internet to create a dialog with customers and
others through online discussion groups,
electronic bulletin boards, electronic surveys,
newsletters, blogs, and e-mail exchanges - Continuing growth in e-health companies which
provide a range of services including storing
personal health data, providing reference
information on a variety of health issues,
running health-care superstores - Telehealth applications, such as telehome health
care, teleradiology, telecardiology,
teledentistry, teledermatology, and others, will
continue to grow
27Current Trends in Health Information
SystemsStandard Development
- Standards are essential for the collection,
storage, and exchange of data, which are
fundamentals of developing CPR and e-commerce
applications, therefore the development of
standards will continue - Vocabulary standards establish common definitions
for medical terms - Structure and content standards identify
essential data elements and provide for
standardization of element characteristics such
as length, data type, and content - Message standards establish the format and
sequence of data during transmission - Security standards identify practices required to
maintain the confidentiality, integrity, and
availability of health-care information
- Organizations
- International Standard Organization (ISO)
- American National Standards Institute (ANSI) does
not develop standards but serves as a
clearinghouse for nationally coordinated
voluntary standards - Health Level 7 (HL7)
- Accredited Standards Committee (ASC)
- Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine
(DIACOM) - National Council on Prescription Drug Programs
(NCPDP) - American Society for Testing and Materials 9ASTM)
- Mandatory standards
- Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act of 1996 (HIPAA)
28Current Trends in Health Information
SystemsPrivacy and Security
- HIPAA promulgated mandatory rules with regard to
both data privacy and security for health-care
organizations - Health-care organizations must be concerned with
confidentiality, integrity, and availability of
the information resource - Management of data security will force
organizational change in structure, behavior,
training and education, and management of
technology - Chief security officer (CSO) will be a new role
- Encrypted keybased authentification and biometric
authentification for guarding data access - Web server guards and server-side session
management through a secure socket layer will be
a regular feature for engaging in any type of
e-commerce
29Current Trends in Health Information
SystemsTechnology Development
- Wireless technology accompanied with handheld
computers and personal digital assistants will be
applied widely in health-care institutions - Interactive technologies such as continuous
speech recognition, touch screen, and multimedia
technology will be applied more widely,
especially in CPR - Continuing growth and applications of database,
data repository, and data warehousing
technologies in the health-care arena
30Current Trends in Health Information Systems
Management of information resources and standards
development
- A distinction between information technology and
systems and IM will emerge - An expended role for information resources
manager, CIO, reporting directly to CEO by
providing him/her with vision and leadership in
the strategic planning, implementation, and
operation of enterprise-wide IS - CIO will play a vital role on the leadership team
in helping to define the strategic objectives of
the organization as a whole
31Current Trends in Health Information SystemsThe
virtual health-care system
- In a virtual IS, health-care enterprises view
their information resource from the perspective
of VR - View of information goes beyond an IS confined in
an organization - Critical data reside anywhere, either internal or
external to an organization - Virtual IS will be embraced by developing and
implementing the following facility communication
links - Physician-healthcare
- Third-party-healthcare
- Government-healthcare
- Alliance and partner-healthcare
- Customer/client-healthcare