Title: Patient Care Information Systems
1Patient Care Information Systems
- Suzanne Bakken, RN, DNSc
- October 23, 2001
2Purpose
- To illustrate the manner in which information
systems support the patient care process through
the examples of computer-based patient records,
other patient care systems and patient
classification systems
3Core Phenomena of Informatics
- Data
- Information
- Knowledge
- ...of relevance to x, e.g., patient care
4- What kinds of data, information, and knowledge do
we require for patient care?
5Patient-Specific Data
- Demographics (age, gender, race, ethnicity,
source of admission) - Problems (diagnoses, symptoms, reasons for health
care encounter) - Severity of illness score (APACHE, Medis Groups,
Nursing Severity Index) - Interventions (risk assessments, procedures,
medical interventions, nursing interventions,
laboratory tests) - Nursing care intensity
- Outcomes (mortality, morbidity, health services
utilization, functional status, quality of life)
6Agency-Specific Data
- Medicare case mix
- Occupancy
- Hours per patient day
- Skill mix
- Utilization patterns
- Locally developed guidelines, standards of care,
critical paths - Raw and risk-adjusted outcomes
- Provider satisfaction
- Patient satisfaction
7Domain Information and Knowledge
- Synthesized evidence
- Bibliographic databases
- Decision support systems
- Standards of care, practice guidelines
- Comparative databases
8Patient Care Information Systems
- Computer-based patient record
- Ancillary (radiology, pharmacy, laboratory,
dietary) - tied to CPR through order entry and
results review - Patient classification
- Patient monitoring
9- Example 1
- Computer-based Patient Record
10Computer-based Patient Record
- Definitions
- IOM Recommendations
- Attributes
- Barriers
- Status
11Computer-based Patient Record
- A primary patient record is used by healthcare
professionals while providing patient care
services to review patient data or document their
own observations, actions, or instructions - A secondary patient record is derived from the
primary record and contains selected data
elements to aid nonclinical users (ie., persons
not involved in direct patient care) in
supporting, evaluating, or advancing patient care
12Computer-based Patient Record
- A CPR is an electronic patient record that
resides in a system specifically designed to
support users by providing accessibility to
complete and accurate data, alerts, reminders,
clinical decision support systems, links to
medical knowledge, and other aids
13IOM Recommendations
- Health care professionals and organizations
should adopt the CPR as the standard for medical
and all other records related to patient care - To accomplish this the public and private sectors
should join in establishing a CPR Institute
(CPRI) to promote and facilitate development,
implementation, and dissemination of the CPR
14IOM Recommendations
- Both the public and private sectors should expand
support for the CPR and CPR system implementation
through research, development, and demonstration
projects - The CPRI should promulgate uniform national
standards for data and security to facilitate the
implementation of the CPR and its secondary data
bases
15IOM Recommendations
- The CPRI should review federal and state laws and
regulations for the purpose of proposing and
promulgating model legislation and regulations to
facilitate the implementation and dissemination
of the CPR and its secondary data bases and to
streamline the CPR and CPR systems
16IOM Recommendations
- The costs of CPR system should be shared by those
who benefit from the value of the CPR - Full costs of implementing and operating CPRs and
CPR systems should be factored into reimbursement
levels or payment schedules of both public and
private sector third-party payers - Users of secondary databases should support the
costs of creating such data bases
17IOM Recommendations
- Heathcare professional schools and organizations
should enhance educational programs for students
and practitioners in the use of computers, CPRs,
and CPR systems for patient care, education, and
research
18Attributes of CPRs and CPR Systems
- The CPR contains a problem list that clearly
delineates the patients clinical problems and
the current status of each (e.g., the primary
illness is worsening, stable, or improving) - The CPR encourages and supports the systematic
measurement and recording of the patients health
status and functional level to promote more
precise and routine assessment of the outcomes of
patient care
19Attributes of CPRs and CPR Systems
- The CPR state the logical basis for all diagnoses
or conclusions as a means of documenting the
clinical rationale for decisions about the
management of the patients care. This
documentation should enhance use of a scientific
approach in clinical practice and assist the
evolution of a firmer foundation for clinical
knowledge
20Attributes of CPRs and CPR Systems
- The CPR system addresses patient data
confidentiality comprehensively--in particular
ensuring that the CPR is accessible only to
authorized individuals - The CPR is accessible for use in a timely way at
any and all times by authorized individuals
involved in direct patient care. Simultaneous
and remote access to the CPR is possible
21Attributes of CPRs and CPR Systems
- The CPR system allows selective retrieval and
formatting of information by users. It can
provide custom-tailored views of the same
information - The CPR can be linked to both local and remote
knowledge, literature, bibliographic, or
administrative databases and systems (including
those containing clinical practice guidelines or
clinical decision support capabilities) so that
such information is readily available to assist
practitioners in decision making
22Attributes of CPRs and CPR Systems
- The CPR can assist, and in some instances, guide
the process of clinical problem solving by
providing clinicians with decision analysis
tools, clinical reminders, prognostic risk
assessment, and other clinical aids - The CPR supports structured data collection and
stores information using a defined vocabulary.
It adequately supports direct data entry by
practitioners
23Attributes of CPRs and CPR Systems
- The CPR can help individual practitioners and
healthcare provider institutions manage and
evaluate the quality and costs of care - The CPR is sufficiently flexible and expandable
to support not only todays basic information
needs but also the evolving needs of each
clinical specialty and subspecialty
24Attributes of CPRs and CPR Systems
- The CPR can be linked with other clinical records
of a patient--from various settings and time
periods--to provide a longitudinal (lifelong)
record of events that may have influenced a
persons health
25Technological Building Blocks
- Data exchange and vocabulary standards
- Systems communications and network infrastructure
- System reliability and security
- Linkages to secondary databases
26Technological Building Blocks
- Databases and database management systems
- Workstations
- Data acquisition and retrieval
- Text processing
- Image processing and storage
27Technological Barriers
- Human interface and system performance
- Text processing
- Confidentiality and security
- Health data-exchange standards
28Nontechnological Barriers
- Unpredictable user behavior
- Lack of leadership for resolving CPR issues
- Lack of training for developers
- Lack of consensus on the content of the CPR
- Development costs
- Disaggregated health care environment
29Status of Issues Related to CPRs
- CPRI formed
- Healthcare Information Portability and
Accountability Act (K2) - IOM report on confidentiality and security
- Health data-exchange standards
30Status of Attributes
- Problem list and status
- Functional status
- Logical basis of diagnosis and clinical rationale
for treatment - Accessibility
- Confidentiality
- Linkages to local and remote sources of knowledge
- Tailored views
- Structured data entry by providers
- Storage in standardized vocabulary
- Decision analysis and decision support aids
- Manage cost and quality
- Longitudinal record
31(No Transcript)
32(No Transcript)
33(No Transcript)
34(No Transcript)
35(No Transcript)
36(No Transcript)
37(No Transcript)
38(No Transcript)
39(No Transcript)
40(No Transcript)
41(No Transcript)
42(No Transcript)
43(No Transcript)
44- Example 2
- Patient Classification
45Patient Classification
- Patient dependency predict nursing care
requirements (aka acuity, nursing care intensity,
workload) - Severity of illness predict mortality
- Diagnosis-related groups predict resource use,
e.g., cost of care, length of stay
46Essential Elements of Patient Classification Tool
for Nursing Care Requirements
- Tool to predict nursing care requirements for
individual patients - Sound method of validating the amount of care
given to each category of type of patient on each
unit and shift - Sound method of evaluating the patterns of care
delivery by each unit, shift, and staff level - Mechanism of revalidating the amount of care by
patient category and patterns of care delivery on
a periodic basis - Method of relating nursing care requirements to
staff resource allocation on a shift-by-shift and
unit-by-unit basis - Method of monitoring the reliability of patient
classification over time
(deGroot, 1989)
47Examples
- Medicus
- 37 indicators (e.g., unconscious, bath with
assistance, invasive monitoring, patient
education) - THC RV X TH
- THC total hours of care per patient per day
- RV relative value per level of care (standard)
- TH target hours per unit of workload
(institution or unit-specific) - Type I 0-3 hours/24 and Type V 18-24 hours/24
48Examples
- GRASP
- Variable indicators, typically gt45 (e.g.,
emotional status, complexity of clinical
judgments, activities of daily living - Indicators are unit-specific
- Time standards are unit-specific
49Severity of Illness Measures
- Focus on clinical stability and probability of
death - Uses
- Provision of care
- Determination of potentially ineffective care
- Risk-adjustment of outcomes for benchmarking
50Adjusting Risk
- Var(O) Var (V) Var (SE) Var (RE)
- Var (O) is the observed variability in patient
outcomes across providers - Var(V) is the part of Var(O) validly
attributable to quality of care differences among
providers - Var(SE) is the systematic error related to
differences in patient-specific characteristics
among providers - Var(RE) is the random error related to residual
variability caused by unknown or unmeasured
factors.
51Dimensions of Risk
- Age
- Gender
- Acute clinical stability
- Principal diagnosis
- Severity of principal diagnosis
- Extent and severity of comorbidities
- Physical functional status
- Psychological, cognitive, and psychosocial
functioning - Cultural, ethnic, and socioeconomic attributes
and behaviors - Health status and quality of life
- Patient attitudes and preferences for outcomes
52An Example Comparing Risk Adjustment Strategies
in HIV/AIDS
- Quality of nursing care of persons with AIDS
link interventions with outcomes - Predictors
- Apache Acute Physiology scores (APS)
- Nursing Severity Index scores (NSI)
- Quality Audit Marker (QAM)
- Outcomes
- Mortality
- Length of stay
53APACHE System
- Acute Physiologic Score (APS) - primarily vital
signs and laboratory values (e.g., BUN) - Range of possible scores on 14/17 variables
0-211 - No data on creatinine, urine output, or bilirubin
- Chronic Health Evaluation - presence or absence
of specific medical diagnoses - Comparative database for benchmarking
54Nursing Severity Index
- 34 items (range of score 0-34)
- Significant predictor of mortality and length of
stay - Nursing diagnosis-based (28/34 NANDA)
- Nutrition and metabolism (n7)
- Urinary and fecal elimination (n5)
- Activity and exercise (n8)
- Underlying management issues (n5)
- Psychosocial issues (n9)
55Quality Audit Marker
- Developed to measure functional status in
HIV/AIDS - QAM ambulation 2 items
- QAM self-care 6 items
56Descriptive Statistics
Predictors Mean(SD)
Apache APS 34.4(5.9)
Nursing Severity Index 3.1(1.8)
QAM ambulation 7.0(1.5)
QAM self-care 19.6(4.9)
57Significant predictors
- Apache APS
- Significant predictor of mortality
- During hospitalization
- 3 month
- 6 month
- Nursing Severity Index
- Did not significantly predict mortality or length
of stay - QAM self-care
- Did not significantly predict mortality or length
of stay - QAM ambulation
- Significant predictor of length of stay
- Significant predictor of mortality during
hospitalization - Model with 4 predictors better than only Apache
APS at all points in time
58