Title: Lections ?5
1Lections ?5
- Electronic Medical and Health records
2Main Questions
- Medical record Basics
- Electronic Medical Record and Electronic Health
Record - EMR Implementation
- EMR systems in developing countries
31. Medical record Basics
- Medical record definition
- Purpose of the MR
- Format of the MR
- Contents of the MR
- Administrative issues of the MR usage
41.1. Medical record definition
- A medical record, health record, or medical chart
is a systematic documentation of a patient's
medical history and care. - The term 'Medical record' is used both for the
physical folder for each individual patient and
for the body of information which comprises the
total of each patient's health history.
51.2. Purpose of the MR
- The information in the MR allows health care
providers to provide continuity of care to
individual patients. - The MR also serves as a basis for planning
patient care, documenting communication between
the health care provider and any other health
professional contributing to the patient's care,
assisting in protecting the legal interest of the
patient and the health care providers responsible
for the patient's care, and documenting the care
and services provided to the patient. - The MR may serve as a document to educate medical
students/resident physicians, to provide data for
internal hospital auditing and quality assurance,
and to provide data for medical research. - Personal health records (PHR) combine many of the
above features with portability, thus allowing a
patient to share medical records across providers
and health care systems.
61.3. Format of the MR
- Traditionally, medicals records have been written
on paper and kept in folders. - These folders are typically divided into useful
sections, with new information added to each
section chronologically as the patient
experiences new medical issues. - Active records are usually housed at the clinical
site, but older records are often kept in
separate facilities.
71.4. Contents of the MR
- Content of the medical record may vary depending
upon specialty and location, it usually contains
following patients data - identification information
- health history (what the patient tells the health
care providers about his or her past and present
health status) - medical examination findings (what the health
care providers observe when the patient is
examined). - Other information may include lab test results
medications prescribed referrals ordered to
health care providers educational materials
provided and what plans there are for further
care, including patient instruction for self-care
and return visits.
81.4.1. MR general sections
- Demographics include information regarding the
patient which is not medical in nature. It is
often information to locate the patient including
identifying numbers, addresses, and contact
numbers. It may contain information about race
and religion as well as workplace and type of
occupational information. It may also contain
information regarding the patient's health
insurance. - The medical history is a longitudinal record of
what has happened to the patient since birth. It
chronicles diseases, major and minor illnesses as
well as growth landmarks. It gives the clinician
a feel for what has happened before to the
patient. As a result, it may often give clues to
current disease states.
91.4.1. MR general sections
- Medical history section of the MR include
- Surgical history - is a chronicle of surgery
performed for the patient (dates of operations,
operative reports, etc.). - Medications and medical allergies - a summary of
the patient's current and previous medications as
well as any medical allergies. - Family history - lists the health status of
immediate family members as well as their causes
of death (if known). It may also list diseases
common in the family or found only in one sex or
the other. - Social history - is a chronicle of human
interactions. It tells of the relationships of
the patient, his/her careers and trainings,
schooling and religious training. It may explain
the behavior of the patient in relation to
illness or loss. - Habits. Various habits which impact health, such
as tobacco use, alcohol intake, recreational drug
use, exercise, and diet are chronicled, often as
part of the social history. - Immunization history. The history of vaccination
is included.
101.4.1. MR general sections
- Medical encounters.
- Within the medical record, individual medical
encounters are marked by discrete summations of a
patient's medical history by a physician, nurse
practitioner, or physician assistant and can take
several forms. - Hospital admission documentation (ie when a
patient requires hospitalization) or consultation
by a specialist often take an exhaustive form,
detailing the entirety of prior health and health
care. - Routine visits by a provider familiar to the
patient, however, may take a shorter form such as
the problem-oriented medical record (POMR).
111.4.1. MR general sections
- Each medical encounter will generally contain the
aspects - Chief complaint. This is the problem that has
brought the patient to see the doctor. - History of the present illness. A detailed
exploration of the symptoms that the patient is
experiencing which have caused the patient to
seek medical attention. - Physical examination - is the recording of
observations of the patient. This includes the
vital signs and examination of the different
organ systems, especially ones which might
directly be responsible for the symptoms that the
patient is experiencing. - Assessment and plan - is a written summation of
what are the most likely causes of the patient's
current set of symptoms. The plan documents the
expected course of action to address the symptoms
(diagnosis, treatment, etc.).
121.4.1. MR general sections
- Orders - written orders by medical providers are
included in the medical record. These detail the
instructions given to other members of the health
care team by the primary providers. - Test results - the results of testing, such as
blood tests (eg complete blood count) radiology
examinations (eg X-rays), pathology (eg biopsy
results), or specialized testing (eg pulmonary
function testing) are included. - Progress notes - when a patient is hospitalized,
daily updates are entered into the medical record
documenting clinical changes, new information,
etc. - Other information - digital images of the
patient, flowsheets from operations/intensive
care units, informed consent forms, EKG tracings,
outputs from medical devices (such as
pacemakers), chemotherapy protocols, and numerous
other important pieces of information form part
of the record depending on the patient and his or
her set of illnesses/treatments.
131.5. MR Administrative issues
- Medical records are legal documents and are
subject to the laws of the country/state in which
they are produced. As such, there is great
variability in rule governing - production,
- ownership,
- accessibility,
- destruction
142. Electronic Medical Record (EMR) and Electronic
Health Record (EHR)
- Reasons
- EMR and EHR definitions
- Data types in the EMR (EHR)
- EMR Issues
- Standards used within EMR
- EMR categories
15Go from Paper to Digital
Have patient information at your fingertips.
162.1. Top Reasons To Adopt an EMR
- Better access to data
- Pull a patient chart within seconds rather than
minutes. - Never waste valuable time looking for a chart.
- Open and review your patients chart on any
computer in the office with secure HIPAA
compliant software. - Have two or more people work with a chart at the
same time. - Have clinical data at your fingertips when a
consulting or referring physician calls. - Open the patients chart on a wireless computer
when you see him in the hospital. - Access a patients chart online when he calls you
with an emergency at 2 a.m. - Simplify Billing
- More accurate insurance claims submissions.
- Faster and easier Accounts Receivable management.
- Customized and automated billing options.
- Better charting
- Never worry about illegible handwriting.
- Update medication and problem lists with every
visit. - Import lab results, diagnostic images, and
hospital discharge summaries into the
patients record.
172.2. EMR and EHR Definitions
- Electronic Medical Record (EMR)
- Electronic health-related information on an
individual within one healthcare organization - Electronic Health Record (HER)
- Electronic health-related information on an
individual across more than one health care
organization - Personal Health Record (PHR)
- Electronic health-related information on an
individual managed, shared and controlled by the
individual
182.2.1. Overlap in Terminology
- An electronic medical record (EMR) is a medical
record in digital format. - In health informatics an EMR is considered by
some to be one of several types of EHR
(electronic health record)s, but in general usage
EMR and EHR are synonymous. - The term has sometimes included other (HIT, or
Health Information Technology) systems which keep
track of medical information, such as the
practice management system which supports the
electronic medical record.
192.3. Data types in the EMR
- An electronic medical (health) record might
include - Patient demographics.
- Medical history, examination and progress reports
of health and illnesses. - Medicine and allergy lists, and immunization
status. - Laboratory test results.
- Radiology images (X-rays, CTs, MRIs, etc.)
- Photographs, from endoscopy or laparoscopy or
clinical photographs. - Medication information, including side-effects
and interactions. - Evidence-based recommendations for specific
medical conditions - A record of appointments and other reminders.
- Billing records.
- Advanced directives, living wills, and health
powers of attorney.
202.4. EMR and EHR general notes
- Ideal characteristics of an EHR
- Information should be able to be continuously
updated. - The data from an EHR system should be able to be
used anonymously for statistical reporting for
purposes of quality improvement, outcome
reporting, resource management, and public health
communicable disease surveillance. - The ability to exchange records between different
electronic health records systems
("interoperability") would facilitate the
co-ordination of healthcare delivery in
non-affiliated healthcare facilities
212.4.1. EMR Issues- Interoperability
- In healthcare, interoperability is the ability of
different information technology systems and
software applications to communicate, to exchange
data accurately, effectively, and consistently,
and to use the information that has been
exchanged. - Health Information Exchange (HIE)
- The mobilization of healthcare information
electronically across organizations within a
region of community - For example, in 2004 in the USA the Office of the
National Coordinator for Health Information
Technology (ONC) was created, in order to address
interoperability issues and to establish a
National Health Information Network (NHIN).
222.4.2. Interoperability
- The Center for Information Technology Leadership
described four different categories (levels) of
data structuring at which health care data
exchange can take place. While it can be achieved
at any level, each has different technical
requirements and offers different potential for
benefits realization
N Data Type Example
1 Non-electronic data Paper, mail, and phone call.
2 Machine transportable data Fax, email, and unindexed documents.
3 Machine organizable data (structured messages, unstructured content) HL7 messages and indexed (labeled) documents, images, and objects.
4 Machine interpretable data (structured messages, standardized content) Automated transfer from an external lab of coded results into a providers EHR. Data can be transmitted (or accessed without transmission) by HIT systems without need for further semantic interpretation or translation.
232.4.3. Older record incorporation
- To attain the wide accessibility, efficiency,
patient safety and cost savings promised by EMR,
older paper medical records ideally should be
incorporated into the patient's record. - The digital scanning process involved in
conversion of these physical records to EMR is an
expensive, time-consuming process, which must be
done to exacting standards to ensure exact
capture of the content. - Results of scanned records are not always usable
medical surveys found that 22-25 of physicians
are much less satisfied with the use of scanned
document images than that of regular electronic
data.
242.4.4. Barriers and Limitations
- 80 of the work of EMR implementation must be
spent on issues of change management, while only
20 is spent on technical issues related to the
technology itself. - Organizational and social issues include
restructuring workflows, dealing with physicians'
resistance to change, as well as IT personnels'
resistance to design and implementation
flexibility needed in the complex healthcare
environment, and creating a collaborative
environment that fosters communication between
physicians and information technology project
managers. - Limitations in software, hardware and networking
technologies has made EMR difficult to affordably
implement in small, budget conscious, multiple
location healthcare organizations too.
252.4.5. Preservation
- The physical medical records are the property of
the medical provider that prepares them. This
includes films and tracings from diagnostic
imaging procedures such as x-ray, CT, PET, MRI,
ultrasound, etc. - In the USA, EMR is referred to as Protected
Health Information (PHI) and its management is
addressed under the Health Insurance Portability
and Accountability Act (HIPAA) as well as many
local laws. - The patient, according to HIPAA, owns the
information contained within the record and has a
right to view the originals, and to obtain copies
under law. - Additionally, those responsible for the
management of the EMR are responsible to see the
hardware, software and media used to manage the
information remain usable and not degraded. This
requires backup of the data and protection being
provided to copies.
262.5. Standards used within EMR
- There are many standards relating to specific
aspects of EMRs. These include - ASTM International Continuity of Care Record - a
patient health summary standard based upon XML,
the CCR can be created, read and interpreted by
various EMR systems, allowing easy
interoperability between otherwise disparate
enities. - ANSI X12 (EDI) - A set of transaction protocols
used for transmitting virtually any aspect of
patient data. Has become popular in the United
States for transmitting billing information. - HL7 - HL7 messages are used for interchange
between hospital and physician record systems and
between EMR systems and practice management
systems HL7 Clinical Document Architecture (CDA)
documents are used to communicate documents such
as physician notes and other material. - DICOM - a heavily used standard for representing
and communicating radiology images and reporting .
272.5.1. HL7 (Health Level 7)
- Most widely used standard. General clinical
messaging standard. Communicates structured data.
Have a fields for - Diagnostic Results
- Notes
- Referrals
- Scheduling Information
- Nursing Notes
- Problems
- Clinical Trials data
- 2000 hospitals, the CDC and most referral labs.
- Also used in Canada, Australia, New Zealand,
Japan and extensively in Europe - Bridges many systems, including laboratory,
dictation, pharmacy, electronic patient records,
performance databases, data repositories (cancer
registries) etc. - Web Site
- http//www.mcis.duke.edu/standards/HL7/h17.htm
282.6. EMR categories
- The "born digital" record, which is information
captured in a native electronic format originally
is information that may be entered into a
database, transcribed from an electronic tablet
or notebook PC, or in some other manner captured
from its inception electronically. The
information is then transferred to a server or
other host environment, where it is stored
electronically. - The records originally produced in a paper or
other hardcopy form (x-ray film, photographs,
etc.) that have been scanned or imaged and
converted to a digital form. These records are
best described as "digital format records", as
their content is not able to be modified or
altered (without a third party software using of
to make "overlay notations") as electronic
records are. Most medical records generated
preceding the year 2000 are of this category.
292.6.1. EMR categories
EHR components Basic Full
Health Info Data
Order Entry
Medication Orders
Lab Orders
Radiology orders
Rx sent electronically
Orders sent electronically
Results Management
View lab results
View imaging results
Images returned
Clinical Decision support
Public Health
303. EMR Implementation
- Status of EHR Adoption
- EHR development planing
- EHR examples
313.1.Status of EHR Adoption
- Only 4 of physicians use an extensive, fully
functional system for electronic health records,
and 13 use some form of basic electronic records - Those who use electronic records are generally
satisfied with the systems and believe that they
improve the quality of care that patients receive
Source Jha DesRoches N ENGL J MED 3591
323.1.Status of EHR Adoption
Setting 2006 () 2007 () 2008 () 2009 ()
PO (basic) 11 13 17
PO ( full) 3 4 4
Hospitals (basic) NA NA 8
Hospitals (full) NA NA 2
Source CDC National Ambulatory Medical Survey
(NAMC) of 2700 physicians RR 62 AHA3037
hospitals RR 63
333.1.Status of EHR Adoption
343.1. Effect of Adoption of EHR Systems
DesRoches CM et al. N Engl J Med 200835950-60
353.2. EHR development planing
- System implementation projects, in general,
experience low success rates - 28 of projects meet full success
- 49 of projects are fully completed, but over
budget, over schedule and lack full scope of
planned functionality - 23 of projects experience complete failure or
are cancelled - EMR/EHR system implementations have even higher
failure rates. Industry studies reveal failure
rates of 50, others as high as 70.
363.2.1. Planning for Success
- The key contributing factors to implementation
failure reported were - Lack of planning unclear vision, goals and
approach, not aligned with vendor incentives,
schedules, other practice priorities and other
resource responsibilities. - Incomplete, unclear and/or changing requirements.
- Lack of executive support and commitment.
- Lack of resources dedicated to the project
(staff, time, money, end-user involvement,
project management and IT support) - Unrealistic expectations for what can be
accomplished and how quickly it can occur.
373.2.2. The EHR Adoption Process
383.2.3. Framework of EMR solutions
393.2.4. How do Clinicians Interact with EMRs
403.3. EHR example
Electronic health record (EHR) with image and
document links
41EMR frontscreen MediNotes
42EMR Veterans Affairs
VA DoD
43EMR MS Office OneNote
44EMR face sheet AMBAS
45EMR progress notes AMBAS
46Automated patient qaire ADS
47Pediatric EMR MDS Medical
48PMS scheduler AMBAS
494. EMR systems in developing countries
- Developing country issues
- Critical issues
- Active EMR and reporting systems
- By Philippe Boucher, World Health Organization,
eHealth unit - London, UK, (2007)
504.1. Developing country issues
- Mobile populations
- limited means of patient identification
- Massive shortage of health care workers
- Physical access to health services
- Limited infrastructure
- Limited access to drugs
- High disease burden combined with poverty
- Donor and aid agency requirements
- Privacy, confidentiality, and security
- Delivery of specific health services by lay
health workers (task shifting)
514.2. Critical issues
- ApproachA shift in perspective from a reporting
based model of system design to a more learning
based approach whose main focus is on direct
care. - LocalizationSystems need to be adaptable and
relevant to local needs and culture. This
requires that they be usable in local languages,
properly understand data elements which vary by
culture such as personal names and addresses, and
be able to manage appropriate clinical terms and
concepts which describe local health care.
524.2. Critical issues
- Costing and ownershipImplementing organizations
must consider innovative approaches to managing
the costs of development, licensing, deployment,
and support. Open source and open standards are
viable options to use alongside more traditional
approaches. Local ownership of systems must be
encouraged and supported. - Personal data protectionPatient data privacy and
confidentiality is a key concern and must be
addressed by all systems both technologically and
through policy and legislation. - Business caseElectronic Medical Record systems
deployed in developing countries are driven by
programme management needs across districts,
regions and countries.
534.3. Active EMR and reporting systems
- A very basic sampling of a few EMR and reporting
systems used in developing countries, developed
using different methodologies, sometimes locally,
sometimes abroad - CareWare (US PEPFAR countries - Africa,
Caribbean, Asia)? - OpenMRS (Eastern Africa)?
- SmartCare (Zambia)?
- LabTracker (Zimbabwe)?
- Fuschia (MSF)?
- Esope (Esther)?
- Baobab/Lighthouse system, Taiwanese Medical
Mission System (Malawi)? - DHIS (South Africa, India)?
Inclusion or exclusion of systems on this list
does not imply WHO endorsement
54WHO/Evelyn Hockstein
WHO/Evelyn Hockstein
55Conclusion
- In this lecture was considered next questions
- Medical record Basics
- Electronic Medical Record and Electronic Health
Record - EMR Implementation
- EMR systems in developing countries
56Literature
- Electronic documentation on to the TDMU server
- http//www.tdmu.edu.te.ua