Title: Public Health Informatics
1Public Health Informatics
- Rita Kukafka, DrPH, MA
- Department of Biomedical Informatics, College of
Physicians and Surgeons - Department of Sociomedical Sciences, Mailman
School of Public Health - Medical Informatics Course for Health
Professionals - Woods Hole, MA
- September, 2006
2Session Overview
- What is public health?
- What is public health informatics?
- Historical context for the discipline
- Challenges and Solutions
- How public health connects to consumer health and
the personal health record
3- First, a perspective on public health
4You might be a public health professional if you
are.
- looking to control the most basic of human
functions, e.g., lobbying the Federal Trade
Commission to investigate snack-food and
soft-drink marketing or promoting a twinkie
tax." - worrying about eating, smoking, HIV/AIDS,
bioterrorism, health literacy and hand washing
all in one day. - spending hours per day trying to define yourself,
your work, and explaining your work to others.
5What is a public health professional?
- ..A public health professional is a person
educated in public health or a related discipline
who is employed to improve health through a
population focus
6What is public health?
- "what we, as a society, do collectively to assure
the conditions in which people can be healthy - the specialty emphasizing prevention, with the
object of its work being populations, in contrast
to the historical role of medicine, dentistry,
and other clinical disciplines that focus on
healing, with the object of their work being
individuals
7Now
- A perspective on public health informatics..
8What is public health informatics?
- Systematic application of information and
computer science and technology to pubic health
practice, research and learning. - (Yasnoff, 2001)
9Public Health Informatics added to MeSH
(Medical Subject Headings) very recently in 2003
10As of (May 2006)
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12www.dbmi.columbia.edu
13Four universitiesColumbia University, Johns
Hopkins, University of Utah, and the University
of Washingtonnow offer fellowships in Public
Health Informatics. The programs, designed to
prepare public health leaders to apply
informatics to public health problems, are
supported by a 3.68 million grant from The
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to the US National
Library of Medicine (NLM).
14Disciplines underlying informatics
Law
Management
Disciplines within public health
15- More than automating existing activities.
- Enables new approaches
- Promise is in engineering innovative new ways to
protect and promote the publics health using the
power of information science and technology
16Automate the way we currently do business
- Consider notifiable disease surveillance
- Hospital maintains their records, and also mails
initial disease report form to LHD there, PH
nurse completes form, and mails it to state
epidemiologist or - Same as above, but PH nurse completes an on-line
form, e-mails it to state epidemiologist
17Change the way we currently do business
- Again, notifiable disease surv. example
- Hospital maintains their own information systems
as usual - State epidemiologist uses Internet to
simultaneously query multiple hospital data
systems in real time.
18Principals of public health informatics
- Public health informatics shares with medical
informatics an underlying science with
associated methods, techniques and theories.
19Public Health Informatics in Perspective
Medical Informatics Methods, Techniques, and
Theories
Basic Research
Molecular and Cellular Processes
Tissues and Organs
Individuals (Patients)
Populations And Society
20Four Underpinning Principles
- The primary focus of public health is to promote
the health of populations and not the health of
specific individuals. - The primary strategy of public health is
prevention of disease and injury by altering the
conditions or the environment that put
populations at risk. - Public health professionals explore the potential
for prevention at all vulnerable points in the
causal chains leading to disease, injury, or
disability public health activities are not
restricted to particular social, behavioral, or
environmental contexts. - Public health interventions typically reflect the
governmental context in which public health is
practiced.
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22The Prevention Continuum
Primary
Secondary
Tertiary Prevention
Health Promotion Screening
Disease Management
Disease Free Subclinical
Disease Clinical Disease
A
B
C
Well
Premature/Preventable
Mortality
TIME
23Roots of Modern Public Health Informatics
- In 1854, a major cholera outbreak in London had
already taken nearly six hundred lives when Dr.
John Snow, using a hand-drawn map, showed that
the source of the disease was a contaminated
water pump.
24A Classic Story Dr. John Snow (1813-1858)
- The relevant 1854 London Streets
- Location of the Deaths from Cholera
- The position of 13 water pumps
Population based orientation rather than patient
based
Generated using CDC Epi Map 2000 for Windows, a
public domain package that can be downloaded
from http//www.cdc.gov/epiinfo/EI2000.htm)
25Today, we have a vast array of data to monitor
the publics health. 190 data sources are
currently being used to collect progress of
Healthy People 2010 health objectives for the
nation.
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27Key Challenges
- Data collected categorically exist in silos,
lacks standards and interoperability - PH reporting is traditionally slow, not suitable
for responding to bioterrorism and emerging
infectious diseases - Major gaps exist between public health and health
care
28Examples of informatics applied to public health
practice
29What is Syndromic Surveillance?
- Real-time public health surveillance using data
that is routinely collected for other purposes
30Legal Mandate
Local health officers shall exercise due
diligence in ascertaining the existence of
outbreaks of illness or the unusual prevalence of
diseases, and shall immediately investigate the
causes of same.
New York State Sanitary Code, 10 NYCRR Chapter
1, Section 2.16(a)
31New Response Requirements
- Fast detection
- Fast science
- Fast effective communication
- Fast effective integration
- Fast effective action
- Globalization, connectivity, and speed
32Goals
- Early detection of large outbreaks
- Characterization of size, spread, and tempo of
outbreaks once detected - Monitoring of disease trends
33Early Detection of Large Outbreaks
Symptom Onset
Severe Illness
Release
Number of Cases
Days
34Characterization of Outbreak
Symptom Onset
Severe Illness
Number of Cases
Days
35Which Scenario will happen?
- Depends on
- agent
- quality and quantity,
- method of dispersion,
- population characteristics
- Which scenario will occur is unknowable
- We should be prepared for both possibilities
36Collection of Clinical Data
- Manual Reporting
- Telephone
- Paper
- Paper w/ electronic reporting
- Web-based
- ?Case Based Reporting (drop-in systems)
- Automated Data Collection
37Syndromic Surveillance for Bioterrorism Following
the Attacks on the World Trade Center --- New
York City, 2001
Compared the daily ratio to its cumulative
baseline by hospital, hospital cluster, or
postal-code cluster. Alarms were generated when
the SNR (daily counts of each syndrome of
interest divided by the "none of the above)
category was significantly higher for the day in
question compared with the recent past.
38Potential Syndromic Surveillance Data Sources
- Day 1- feels fine
- Day 2- headaches, fever- buys Tylenol
- Day 3- develops cough- calls nurse hotline
- Day 4- Sees private doctor flu
- Day 5- Worsens- calls ambulance
- seen in ED
- Day 6- Admitted- pneumonia
- Day 7- Critically ill- ICU
- Day 8- Expires- respiratory failure
Pharmaceutical Sales
Nurses Hotline
Managed Care Org
Absenteeism
Ambulance Dispatch (EMS)
ED Logs
Traditional Surveillance
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40Public Health Information Network (PHIN)
- CDCs national initiative to implement a
multi-organizational business and technical
architecture for public health information
systems. - Initial work toward the adoption and
implementation of standards-based, integrated,
and interoperable information technology (IT)
systems - Now moved toward defining PHIN functions and
specifications - PHIN Preparedness Initiative focuses on
certifying systems against function, technical
and operational requirements
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42PHIN Components for Disease Surveillance
Traditional Surveillance
Syndromic Surveillance
Public Health Information Network (PHIN)
Environmental
Surveillance
Internet
Emergency Communications
detection
response
43Informatics methods can be applied at all these
points
Health Department Information Systems
Analysis Alerting Visualization
Sources of surveillance data
Reduced mortality, morbidity
Decision Making
Database
Action
e.g., Algorithms Visualization Tools Decision
support
RODS Lab
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46GIS in surveillance and public health practice
Turn data into meaningful decision support
- Improved decision making
- Improved service and health outcomes
- Reduced health inequalities
- Reduced costs
- Service benefits
- Better understanding of current situations
- Planning/targeting
- appropriate interventions
- Prioritizing, monitoring and
- tweaking interventions
- as necessary
47GIS in MeSH 2006
48PubMed (May 2006)
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52Adult (15-49) HIV Prevalence Rate ()
1985
2005
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54Perhaps the greatest challenge and ultimate
benefit of improved PH infrastructure utilizing
informatics methods
- Closing the gap that exists between public health
and health care - .enter the EHR and PHR
55Bilateral real-time communication between public
health and clinical information systems
- Benefits
- Enables public health interventions at
- the point of care
- Decision support to providers on
- Preventive practices based on patient
characteristics - Tailored patient education on current
medications, medical problems and conditions,
tests and procedures. - Ability for patients to control and
- maintain their own health data
Public Health
Clinical Care
56Other emerging applications in public health
informatics a schematic view
Clinical services
Telehealth
Clinical/Medical Informatics
C
Primary focus
A
Consumer Health Informatics
Public Health Informatics
B
Population health
A represents tools for population health such as
syndromic surveillance epidemiology databases B
represents health promotion or disease prevention
tools
57Duel Benefits
- The very same infrastructure and capabilities
used to support data capture at the point of
care for emergency preparedness can most
definitely be used to implement non-attack public
health intervention.
58 Data are from McGinnis et al, JAMA 1993
The percentages are for all deaths Data
are from Mokdad et al JAMA 2004
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60EMS Drug Calls
61Examples of informatics application to modify
high risk health behavior
- A Tailored Intervention to Link Primary Care
Practices with Community Health Resources - Tailored intervention to link patients wishing
to make behavior changes to an existing web-based
resource that provides local support and
educational materials. Patients will be directed
to this resource via a health promotion Rx
62Tailoring system program
63- Modular Lifestyle Intervention Tool (MLIT)A
handheld clinical decision support tool to assist
clinicians in providing patient-tailored
counseling at the point of care. Practices will
adopt smoking and BMI as vital signs, which cue
the clinician to address the target behavior and
use the software.
64- Testing PDA-Based Interventions for Smoking and
Unhealthy DietTwo evidence-based, best practice
protocols mounted on PDAs will be used to guide
patient interventions around smoking and diet.
Community health advisors will be used to promote
and support patients attempting change.
65- Using Behavior-change Action Plans during the
Primary Care Visit - Incorporate behavior change action plans into
routine visits and follow with six-month patient
self-assessment questionnaire and clinician
action plan assessment questionnaire.
66Major PHI Challenges
- Re-connecting clinical medicine and public health
practice - 21st century disease surveillance Integrated PH
Information Systems - Pressing Challenge
- Thinking outside the box-
- Duel use systems that are flexible
- enough to respond to changing public health
needs
67Perspective ChallengeDiverse Sets of Agencies
Partner Organizations
- Affiliated Organizations
- 115
- Agencies / Professionals
- 60 States Territories health departments
- 3000 local heath departments
- 100,000 professionals
- 50 disciplines
68The Public Health System
69- Field of public health informatics offers many
challenges (and applications) yet to be
discovered.
70Where are we?