Title: Hippocrates, Winslow
1Hippocrates, Winslow Babbage HWB Foundation
Richard Ghillani, M.D.Bradford Henley,
M.D.David Karges, D.O.Henry Mankin, M.D.
Jeffrey Mast, M.D.Augusto Sarmiento, M.D.Marc
Swiontkowski, M.D.Edward Yang, M.D.
not-for-profithttp//www.hwbf.org13th Annual
Meeting McCormick Place E266Chicago, ILMarch
23, 2005AGENDA
- Annual Report
- Data Collection
- Educational Archives
- Meetings
- By-Laws
- Certification
2Registries - Why?
- "Maintenance of an active registry must be viewed
as important as the medical care rendered, if the
right person is going to receive the right
treatment in a timely fashion without undue cost
to society. - Gillot et al, Development of a Statewide Trauma
Registry, J Trauma 291667, 1989
3Registries - Why?
- It is our professional responsibility to try to
continuously improve our performance, which
cannot be done without the collection of end
result information. - Swiontkowski M, Why we should collect outcomes
data, JBJS 35A Supplement 114 2003
4Data QualityPolitical Factors
- Health Info Tech Success
- 80 dependent on political factors
- 20 dependent on info technologyReed Gardner
1998 Past President of AMIA
5Data Collection - Why?
- "The future belongs to whoever best measures
quality of care and then markets it best. - Whoever does will absolutely control the market,
and everyone who doesn't will disappear." - Richard L. Scott, Esq, former CEO Columbia/HCA
HealthCare Corp.
6Data Collection - Why?
- "Tens of millions of dollars have been spent in
the establishment of trauma databases over the
past 15 years. Much data is gleaned from ICD
entries into administrative databases. - The emphasis here is for maximum reimbursement.
Because of the lack of clinical detail the data
within these registries, the data is inadequate
for sophisticated research and outcome analysis.
" - Cushing, Champion - J TRAUMA 1995
7Open Tibia Fracture ICD 823.3
8Practice Profiling
Data Collection by Default
- Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council
- Maine Quality Forum
- Medicare Hospital Quality Initiative
9Data Collection How?
UMC HOSPITAL Records
Vanderbilt Medical Center 13,199
Elmhurst Hospital Center 10,886
Bellevue Hospital Center 6983
Detroit Receiving Hospital 6636
Hartford Hospital 4262
Hennepin County Med Ctr 1043
Norfolk Norwich (UK) 633
Southern Illinois University 456
Denver General Hospital 450
MIEMSS 168
University of Geneva 46
Rhode Island Hospital 0
Maricopa County Hospital 0
Grady Memorial 0
Henry Ford Hospital 0
TOTAL 44,762
10Data Collection How?HWB Shortfall Not Unique
- Electronic Medical Record - a cresting wave for
30 years - has not broken. - 10 adoption - Berner et al, JAMIA Feb 2005
Katsushika Hokusai wood engraving "The Great
Wave off Kanagawa" - cerca 1830
11Data Collection How?President Bush State of
the Union
- Proposes all Americans have an EMR in 10 years to
prevent medical errors and needless costs. - Spend 125 million
to get the job done. -
-
http//www.jibjab.com
12Data Collection Failure - Causes JAMIA Feb
2005
- EMR Problems
- Malaligned Incentives
- Product Viability
- Data Quality
- Standards - Interoperability
13Data Collection Failure - Causes JAMIA Feb
2005
- Malaligned Incentives
- Minimal Return On Investment
- with
- Information vs Imaging technology.
- CT study billable - not EMR data.
14Data Collection Failure - Causes JAMIA Feb
2005
- Malaligned Incentives - Rx
- Indirect Reduction
- through Practice Management Integration
- Billing
- Reporting
- Scheduling
- Transcription
- Archiving
15Data Collection Failure - Causes JAMIA Feb
2005
- Malaligned Incentives Rx
- Indirect Reduction
- through facilitation of
- Risk Adjusted Practice Profiling
- Error Checking - Liability Reduction
- RRC Certification
- Academic Promotion
16Data Collection Failure - Causes Leape,
Massachusetts Plan, NPR 02/04/05
- Malaligned Incentives Rx
- 3rd Party Payors to purchase MD EMR.
- EMR Cost _at_ 35,000/MD (800 million)
- 3rd Party Savings ( 5 billion) through
- fewer errors and complications
- fewer inappropriate tests
- fewer inappropriate meds
- fewer billing errors
17Data Collection Failure - Causes JAMIA Feb
2005
- EMR Problems
- Malaligned Incentives
- Product Viability
- Data Quality
- Standards - Interoperability
18Database Production and Maintenance Engh et al.
CORR 421 April 2004Product Viability
- 1977
- Starts porous coated THA stem.
- Seeks documentation of outcomes.
- Data stored on paper forms in a physical chart.
19Database Production and Maintenance Engh et al.
CORR 421 April 2004 Product Viability
- 1983 1992
- Starts electronic archiving - 1 data entry person
- dBASE II (Ashton-Tate)
- dBASE III
- dBASE IV
20Database Production and Maintenance Engh et al.
CORR 421 April 2004 Product Viability
- Early 1990's
- Need
- Automated data entry
- Standardized classifications and outcomes
- dBASE IV to International Documentation and
Evaluation System (IDES) migration
21Database Production and Maintenance Engh et al.
CORR 421 April 2004 Product Viability
- Mid 1990's
- IDES does not allow local modification.
- IDES to FoxPro 2.6 migration with
- Customized scanable forms.
- Codes for a comprehensive Orthopedic Research
Database (ORDB) - Third-party applications to facilitate data
entry, maintenance, and report generation.
22Database Production and Maintenance Engh et al.
CORR 421 April 2004Product Viability
- 2004
- 3rd party apps not compatible with new FoxPro
- FoxPro 2.6 no longer supported by Microsoft
- FoxPro 2.6 not compatible with Windows XP.
- Database not reflecting contemporary clinical
concerns - Currently migrating to another database
application.
23Database Production and Maintenance Engh et al.
CORR 421 April 2004Product Viability
- Summary
- 7 major database changes in 21 years
- associated data corruption/loss
- 50,000 - estimated annual data entry
maintenance cost ( does not include the surgeons
time). - New upgrades will substantially increase annual
cost. - Consider saving the paper.
24Database Production and Maintenance HWB
Experience Software Changes in 12 yearsProduct
Viability
- 5 major database changes in 12 years
- Hypercard 1.0
- Fox Pro 2.5
- Visual Fox Pro 3.0
- FileMaker Pro
- MySQL PHP
- 4 major front-end changes in 12 years
- Hypercard 1.0
- Hypercard 2.0
- Metacard 2.5
- HTML
25Database Costs
Database Cost Cases FTEs
Mayo 1972 CORR 344 400,000/yr 56,000 5
TRACS 1995 NTDB 400,000/yr 1,000,000 3
Brigham 1970 JBJS 82A 350,000/yr 15,000 7
AORI 1977 CORR 421 50,000/yr 8000 1
Mass EMR NPR 02/04/05 35,000/GP -- 1
HWB 1993 www.hwbf.org 12,700/yr 45,000 --
26Data Collection Failure - Causes JAMIA Feb
2005
- EMR Problems
- Malaligned Incentives
- Product Viability
- Data Quality
- Standards - Interoperability
27Data Quality
- "It has become increasingly clear that much of
the clinical research that has long been
published and on which we base much of our
education and practice activity is, in fact,
severely flawed."Keller, SPINE 20 384 1995 - OTA Specialty Day Debate 1999
- Swiontkowski
28Data Quality Tang, Shortliffe et al, JAMIA Proc
1994
- An observational study of physicians using 168
medical records in an internal medicine
outpatient clinic - 81 of cases failure of chart to provide all
information deemed necessary by the physician for
appropriate management of the patient. - 38 of a clinic encounter is taken up by chart
review.
29Data QualityGIGO
- What is written without pain is in general read
without pleasure - Samuel Johnson 1709-1784
- The quality of the data begins with the diligence
of those who generate it. - Charles Engh - CORR 421
30Data Quality Barrie, Marsh, BMJ. 1992
- Manchester physician-entered orthopaedic
database - Data Quality
-
- Completeness X Accuracy
- 62 96
31Data QualityPolitical Factors
- Health Info Tech Success
- 80 dependent on political factors
- 20 dependent on info technologyReed Gardner
1998 Past President of AMIA
32Data QualityPolitical Factors
- 2 surgeons over 55 have a major interest in
orthopaedic trauma. - As it is these surgeons who tend to be
politically influential it is clear that
orthopaedic trauma is considerably disadvantaged.
JBJS 1997 79B1, Court-Brown, McQueen Editorial
Trauma management in the UK
33Data Quality Prospective vs. Retrospective
- Do clinical databases give rise to
- retrospective paper mills ?
34Data Quality Random vs. Non-Random
- Prospective randomized trials are well-proven for
evaluating pharmaceuticals. - Different hands administering a pill, however,
have less influence on the result than different
hands performing a surgical procedure. - Matta JOT August 2001
35Prospective vs. Retrospective Swiontkowski, JOT
2001 Aug
- Because of the difficulty with performing
high-quality control trials, observational
studies are often the best evidence we have. - However
- When orthopaedists rely on these weaker forms of
evidence, they must acknowledge the risk of
utilizing a suboptimal or potentially even
detrimental intervention for patients.
36Prospective vs. Retrospective Benson et al, NEJM
- June 22, 2000
- Observational study advantages over PRCT
- lower cost
- greater timeliness
- a broader range of patients
- However
- Bias is a problem
- Some say
- observational studies are not reliable.
- observational studies should not be funded.
- observational studies should not be published.
37Prospective vs. Retrospective Bhandari et al,
Arch Orthop Trauma Surg. 2004 Jan
- Femoral Neck Fx
- THA vs ORIF
- 14 randomized vs
- 13 non-randomized
THA Random Non-Ran
Mort 1.04 1.44
Rev Redn 0.38 0.23
- Non-randomized studies
- Over estimated THA risk - mortality 40
- Under estimated THA benefit - revision reduction
20
38Prospective vs. Retrospective Benson et al, NEJM
- June 22, 2000
- 136 reports about 19 diverse treatments
- We found little evidence that estimates of
treatment effects in observational studies
reported after 1984 are either consistently
larger than or qualitatively different from those
obtained in randomized, controlled trials
39Prospective vs. Retrospective Concato et al,
NEJM - June 22, 2000
- 99 reports about 5 clinical topics
- The results of well-designed observational
studies (with either a cohort or a case-control
design) do not systematically overestimate the
magnitude of the effects of treatment as compared
with those in randomized, controlled trials on
the same topic.
40Prospective vs. Retrospective Tornetta et al,
OTA 2000
- Randomized trials are subject to Beta (Type II)
error - insufficient sample size. - Beta (Type II) error is the probability of
concluding that no difference between treatment
groups exists, when, in fact, there is a
difference. - The beta (Type II) error rate for randomized
trials in orthopaedic trauma is exceedingly high,
averaging 90.
41Prospective vs. Retrospective Sarmiento, JOT
2001 Aug
- There is not a system today, and there will not
be a system tomorrow, that will guarantee the
elimination of intended or unintended bias or
prejudice from the medical literature. - That being the case, let us accept outcome
studies as well as traditional retrospective
ones.
42Data Quality End User Impact
43Data QualityEMR Design - Embi, JAMIA April 2004
- End User Impact
- Portland VAH
- Documentation Availability
- Work Processes and Communication
- Alterations in Document Structure and Content
- Mistakes, Concerns, and Decreased Confidence
44Data QualityPatel, JAMIA November 2000
- End User Impact
- EMR use changes physician information gathering
and reasoning strategies. - Technology has a profound influence in shaping
cognitive behavior. - Effects on cognition by technology design needs
to be explored.
45Data QualityAMNews Feb. 17, 2003
- End User Impact
- EMR Rejection - Cedars Sinai Revolt
- "They poorly designed the system, poorly sold it
and then jammed it down our throats and had the
audacity to say everybody loves it and that it's
a great system. -
- Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles has
indefinitely suspended use of its computerized
physician order entry (CPOE) system, after
hundreds of doctors complained it was difficult
to use and compromised patient safety - Los Angeles Times
46Data Collection Failure - Causes JAMIA Feb
2005
- EMR Problems
- Malaligned Incentives
- Product Viability
- Data Quality
- Standards - Interoperability
47Standards Interoperability Open Source
- ?? Solution ?? - Open Source Software e.g.
Linux - PROS
- Low Cost - Free
- Stable
- Could provide essential infrastructure
- US Interstate Highways System
- Internet Transmission Control Protocol / Internet
Protocol - Public Library of program components
- CONS
- Difficult to program and obtain local support
- Microsoft buys IT lunch Significant kickbacks
barriers
48Standards Interoperability Open Source
- ?? Solution ?? - Open Source Software e.g.
Linux - PROS
- Low Cost - Free
- Stable
- Could provide essential infrastructure
- US Interstate Highways System
- Internet Transmission Control Protocol / Internet
Protocol - Public Library of program components
- CONS
- Difficult to program and obtain local support
- Microsoft buys IT lunch Significant kickbacks
barriers
49Summary EMR Potential
benefits risks
Availability Workflow integration Cognitive enhancement Legibility Connectivity Remote Access Error checking Expiration Workflow disruption Cognitive impairment Data fog Diminished privacy Cultural demise Error propagation
50Data Collection How?
UMC HOSPITAL Records
Vanderbilt Medical Center 13,199
Elmhurst Hospital Center 10,886
Bellevue Hospital Center 6983
Detroit Receiving Hospital 6636
Hartford Hospital 4262
Hennepin County Med Ctr 1043
Norfolk Norwich (UK) 633
Southern Illinois University 456
Denver General Hospital 450
MIEMSS 168
University of Geneva 46
Rhode Island Hospital 0
Maricopa County Hospital 0
Grady Memorial 0
Henry Ford Hospital 0
TOTAL 44,762
51Conclusion Hill, NEJM 1953
- "One must go seek more facts, paying less
attention to technique of handling the data and
far more to the development and perfection of the
method for obtaining them."
52Revised HWB Mission Statement
- The mission of the HWB foundation is to find
methods to routinely collect well-specified,
structured and privacy-protected clinical data
from reliable sources and make that data, in
quantities of statistical significance, available
in the public domain where it may be interpreted
from all points of view.