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Electronic Health Records

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Overview: EMRs Using the EMR: Why we need it History & aspects of the EMR Adoption: ... but need to implement and maintain Improving Adoption: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Electronic Health Records


1
Electronic Health Records
  • Robert A. Jenders, MD, MS, FACP
  • Associate Professor, Department of Medicine
  • Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
  • University of California, Los Angeles
  • Co-Chair, Clinical Decision Support Technical
    Committee, HL7
  • 6 October 2005

http//jenders.bol.ucla.edu -gt Documents
Presentations
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Overview EMRs
  • Using the EMR Why we need it
  • History aspects of the EMR
  • Adoption
  • Barriers
  • Improving adoption standards, interoperability
  • Case study CSMC
  • Demonstration Centricity

5
Need for EHR CDSS Medical Errors
  • Estimated annual mortality
  • Air travel deaths 300
  • AIDS 16,500
  • Breast cancer 43,000
  • Highway fatalities 43,500
  • Preventable medical errors 44,000 -
  • (1 jet crash/day) 98,000
  • Costs of Preventable Medical Errors
  • 29 billion/year overall
  • Kohn LT, Corrigan JM, Donaldson MS eds.
    Institute of Medicine. To Err is Human
    Building a Safer Health System. Washington, DC
    NAP, 1999.

6
Need for EHR/CDSSEvidence of Poor Performance
  • USA Only 54.9 of adults receive recommended
    care for typical conditions
  • community-acquired pneumonia 39
  • asthma 53.5
  • hypertension 64.9
  • McGlynn EA, Asch SM, Adams J et al. The quality
    of health care delivered to adults in the United
    States. N Engl J Med 20033482635-2645.
  • Delay in adoption 10 years for adoption of
    thrombolytic therapy
  • Antman EM, Lau J, Kupelnick B et al. A
    comparison of results of meta-analyses of
    randomized control trials and recommendations of
    clinical experts. Treatments for myocardial
    infarction. JAMA 1992268(2)240-8.

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Examples of EHR/CDSS Effectiveness
  • Reminders of Redundant Test Ordering
  • intervention reminder of recent lab result
  • result reduction in hospital charges (13)
  • Tierney WM, Miller ME, Overhage JM et al.
    Physician inpatient order writing on
    microcomputer workstations. Effects on resource
    utilization.JAMA 1993269(3)379-83.
  • CPOE Implementation
  • Population hospitalized patients over 4 years
  • Non-missed-dose medication error rate fell 81
  • Potentially injurious errors fell 86
  • Bates DW, Teich JM, Lee J. The impact of
    computerized physician order entry on medication
    error prevention. J Am Med Inform Assoc
    19996(4)313-21.

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Examples (continued)
  • Systematic review
  • 68 studies
  • 66 of 65 studies showed benefit on physician
    performance
  • 9/15 drug dosing
  • 1/5 diagnostic aids
  • 14/19 preventive care
  • 19/26 other
  • 6/14 studies showed benefit on patient outcome
  • Hunt DL, Haynes RB, Hanna SE et al. Effects of
    computer-based clinical decision support systems
    on physician performance and patient outcomes a
    systematic review. JAMA 1998280(15)1339-46.

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Summary Need for EHR (CDSS)
  • Medical errors are costly
  • Charges/Costs
  • Morbidity/Mortality
  • CDSS technology can help reduce
  • errors
  • costs
  • EHR
  • Collection and organization of data
  • Vehicle for decision support

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Definitions
  • Computer-based Patient Record (CPR) Electronic
    documentation of care, integrating data from
    multiple sources (clinical, demographic info)
  • EMR Single computer application for recording
    and viewing data related to patient care,
    typically ambulatory
  • EHR Suite of applications for recording,
    organizing and viewing clinical data
  • Ancillary systems, clinical data repository,
    results review, CIS, HIS

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Uses of the Medical Record
  • Main purpose Facilitate patient care
  • Historical record What happened, what was done
  • Communication among providers ( patients)
  • Preventive care (immunizations, etc)
  • Quality assurance
  • Legal record
  • Financial coding, billing
  • Research prospective, retrospective

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Characterizing the RecordRepresenting the
Patients True State
True State of Patient
Diagnostic study
Clinician
Paper chart
Dictation
Transcription
Data entry clerk
CPR/Chart Representation
Hogan, Wagner. JAMIA 19974342-55
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Characterizing the RecordRepresenting the
Patients True State
  • Completeness Proportion of observations
    actually recorded
  • 67 - 100
  • Correctness Proportion of recorded observations
    that are correct
  • 67 - 100

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Functional Components
  • Integration of data
  • Standards Messaging (HL7), terminology (LOINC,
    SNOMED, ICD9, etc), data model (HL7 RIM)
  • Interface engine
  • Clinical decision support
  • Order entry
  • Knowledge sources
  • Communication support Multidisciplinary,
    consultation

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Laboratory
Pharmacy
Radiology
Data Warehouse
CDR
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History of the Medical Record
  • 1910 Flexner Report--Advocated maintaining
    patient records
  • 1940s Hospitals need records for accreditation
  • 1960s Electronic HIS--communication (routing
    orders) charge capture
  • 1969 Weed--POMR
  • 1980s IOM report, academic systems
  • 1990s - present Increasing commercial systems,
    increasing prevalence, emphasis on
    interoperability standards (ONCHIT, etc)

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Trend Toward Outpatient Records
  • Inpatient record structured first
  • Regulatory requirement
  • Many contributors (vs solo family practitioner)
  • Reimbursement More money than outpatient visits
  • Now, more attention to outpatient records
  • Multidisciplinary/team care
  • Managed care

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Who Enters Data
  • Clerk
  • Physician Primary, consultant, extender
  • Nurse
  • Therapist
  • Lab reports/ancillary systems
  • Machines Monitors, POC testing

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Fundamental Issue Data Entry
  • Data capture External sources
  • Laboratory information systems, monitors, etc
  • Challenges Interfaces, standards
  • Data input Direct entry by clinicians staff
  • Challenge Time-consuming and expensive
  • Free text vs structured entry

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Data Input
  • Transcription of dictation Very expensive,
    error-prone
  • Encounter form Various types
  • Free-text entry
  • Scannable forms
  • Turnaround document Both presents captures
    data
  • Direct electronic entry
  • Free-text typing
  • Structured entry Pick lists, etc
  • Voice recognition

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Weakness of Paper Record
  • Find the record Lost, being used elsewhere
  • Find data within the record Poorly organized,
    missing, fragmented
  • Read data Legibility
  • Update data Where to record if chart is missing
    (e.g., shadow chart)
  • Only one view
  • Redundancy Re-entry of data in multiple forms
  • Research Difficult to search across patients
  • Passive No decision support

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Advantages of Computer Records
  • Access Speed, remote location, simultaneous use
    (even if just an electronic typewriter)
  • Legibility
  • Reduced data entry Reuse data, reduce redundant
    tests
  • Better organization Structure
  • Multiple views Aggregation
  • Example Summary report, structured flow sheet
    (contrast different data types)
  • Alter display based on context

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Advantages of Computer Records (continued)
  • Automated checks on data entry
  • Data prompts Completeness
  • Range check (reference range)
  • Pattern check ( digits in MRN)
  • Computed check (CBC differential adds to 100)
  • Consistency check (pregnant man!)
  • Delta check
  • Spelling check

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Advantages of Computer Records (continued)
  • Automated decision support
  • Reminders, alerts, calculations, ordering advice
  • Limited by scope/accuracy of electronic data
  • Tradeoff Data specificity/depth of advice vs
    time/cost of completeness
  • Cross-patient analysis
  • Research
  • Stratify patient prognosis, treatment by risks
  • Data review Avoid overlooking uncommon but
    important events

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Advantages of Computer Records (continued)
  • Saves time?
  • 1974 study find data 4x faster in flow sheet vs
    traditional record (10 of subjects could not
    even find some data
  • 2005 systematic review
  • RN POC systems decreased documentation time 24
  • MD increased documentation time 17
  • CPOE More than doubled time

Poissant L, Pereira J, Tamblyn R, Kawasumi Y.
The impact of electronic health records on the
time efficiency of physicians and nurses a
systematic review. J Am Med Inform Assoc
200512(5)505-16.
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Key Ingredients for CPR Success
  • Wide scope of data
  • Sufficient duration of data
  • Understandable representation of data
  • Sufficient access
  • Structured data More than just a giant word
    processor

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Disadvantages of Computer Records
  • Access Security concerns
  • Still, logging helps track access
  • Initial cost
  • Attempted solutions Reimbursement, Office VistA
  • Delay between investment benefit
  • System failure
  • Challenge of data entry
  • Coordination of disparate groups
  • Data diversity Different data elements, media
    (images, tracings), format, units, terminology,
    etc

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Examples Classical EMRs
  • COSTAR
  • Originally in 1960s, disseminated in late 1970s
  • Encounter form input
  • Modular design security, registration,
    scheduling, billing, database, reporting
  • MQL ad hoc data queries
  • Display by encounter or problem (multiple views)

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Classical EMRs (continued)
  • RMRS McDonald (IU), 1974
  • TMR Stead Hammond (Duke), 1975
  • STOR Whiting-OKeefe (UCSF), 1985

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Adoption
  • No advantage if not used!
  • Varying prevalence in USA
  • 20-25 (CHCF, Use and Adoption of Computer-based
    Patient Records, October, 2003)
  • 20 (MGMA, January, 2005)
  • 17 (CDC ambulatory medical care survey 2001-3,
    published March, 2005)
  • Higher prevalence elsewhere
  • Netherlands 90, Australia 65
  • Reasons Single-payer system, certification,
    cost-sharing

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Barriers to EHR Adoption
  • Financial Up-front costs, training, uncertain
    ROI (misalignment of benefits costs), finding
    the right system
  • Cultural Attitude toward IT
  • Technological Interoperability, support, data
    exchange
  • Organizational Integrate with workflow,
    migration from paper

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Improving Adoption
  • Interoperability Increase chance that EHRs can
    be used with each other other systems
  • Systemic Interoperability Commission
  • Compensation
  • CPT code CMS trial
  • P4P Reporting measures decision support to
    improve performance
  • Standards
  • Certification CCR, EHR Functional Model
    Specification
  • HIPAA/NCVHS CHI

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Improving Adoption CCR
  • ASTM E31 WK4363 (2004). Coalition AAP, AAFP,
    HIMSS, ACP, AMA, etc
  • Defines the core data elements content of the
    patient record in XML
  • Read/write standard data elements Snapshot of
    the record
  • Therefore increases interoperability
  • Uses Record sharing, eRx (allergies,
    medications), certification
  • Components standard content elements
    spreadsheet implementation guide XML schema

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CCR HEADER
CCR BODY
CCR FOOTER
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Improving AdoptionEHR Functional Model
Specification
  • HL7 2004 Funded by US Government
  • Identifies key functions of the EHR
  • Purpose
  • Guide development by vendors
  • Facilitate certification
  • Facilitate interoperability
  • Certification governance CCHIT

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Improving Adoption DOQ-IT
  • Doctors Office Quality - Information Technology
  • Outgrowth of CMS-funded QIOs
  • ACP, Lumetra, etc
  • Goal Overcome barriers to EHR adoption
  • Interventions
  • Expert advice Needs assessment, vendor
    selection, case management, workflow integration
  • Peer-to-peer dialog Share best practices
  • Does not provide funding, day-to-day assistance

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Improving Adoption Office VistA
  • VistA Veterans Information System Technology
    Architecture
  • M-based comprehensive VA EHR
  • Includes CPRS Computer-based Patient Record
    System
  • Office VistA
  • Outpatient version
  • Due for release Q4 2005 (available under FOIA)
  • Challenge Free up front, but need to implement
    and maintain

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Improving Adoption RHIOs
  • Facilitates interoperability Mechanism for
    exchanging data between organizations
  • Important elements
  • Standards Messaging, data model, terminology
  • Mechanism Clearinghouses
  • Part of a federated NHIN
  • Important driver Public health
  • Integrate data from many HCOs
  • Syndromic surveillance (e.g., RODS, etc)
  • Examples Santa Barbara Indiana CalRHIO

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Improving Adoption through StandardsArchitectura
l Elements to Support EHRs
  • Components to support decision support
  • Central data repository Data models
  • Controlled, structured vocabulary
  • Data messaging (HL7 v2.x, v3)
  • Decision Support
  • Knowledge acquisition
  • Knowledge representation (KR)

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HL7 EHR/CDSS Standards Efforts
  • Components
  • Data model RIM
  • (Standard vocabularies)
  • CDA documents
  • Access CCOW
  • Knowledge representation
  • Common Expression Language (GELLO)
  • Arden Syntax
  • Clinical guidelines GEM vs GLIF3 vs ?
  • InfoButton
  • Order Set
  • EHR Functional Model and Standard

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Standard Data Models
  • Candidates
  • RIM HL7 Reference Information Model
  • vMR Virtual Medical Record
  • Purpose Promote knowledge transfer
  • Standardize references to patient data in rules
  • Goal Avoid manual rewriting of data references
    when sharing rules

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Standard Data Models HL7 RIM
  • High-level, abstract model of all exchangeable
    data
  • Concepts are objects Act (e.g., observations),
    Living Subject, etc
  • Object attributes
  • Relationship among objects
  • Common reference for all HL7 v3 standards
  • Facilitates interoperability Common model for
    messaging, queries
  • Schadow G, Russler DC, Mead CN, McDonald
    CJ. Integrating medical information and
    knowledge in the HL7 RIM. Proc AMIA Symp
    2000764-768.

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Standard Vocabularies
  • CHI NCVHS efforts Patient Medical Record
    Information (PMRI) terminology standards
  • Examples SNOMED-CT, ICD-9, LOINC, CPT, etc
  • Facilitation Free licensing of SNOMED in USA as
    part of UMLS
  • Use HL7 Common Terminology Services (CTS)
    standard

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Common Expression Language (GELLO)
  • Purpose Share queries and logical expressions
  • Query data (READ)
  • Logically manipulate data (IF-THEN, etc)
  • Current work GELLO (BWH) Guideline Expression
    Language
  • Current status ANSI standard release 1, May,
    2005
  • Ogunyemi O, Zeng Q, Boxwala A. Object-oriented
    guideline expression language (GELLO)
    specification Brigham and Womens Hospital,
    Harvard Medical School, 2002. Decision Systems
    Group Technical Report DSG-TR-2002-001.

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Arden Syntax
  • ASTM v1 1992, HL7 v2 1999, v2.1 (ANSI) 2002, v2.5
    2005 http//cslxinfmtcs.csmc.edu/hl7/arden/
  • Formalism for procedural medical knowledge
  • Unit of representation Medical Logic Module
    (MLM)
  • Enough logic data to make a single decision
  • Generate alerts/reminders
  • Adopted by several major vendors
  • Jenders RA, Dasgupta B.  Challenges in
    implementing a knowledge editor for the Arden
    Syntax knowledge base maintenance and
    standardization of database linkages. Proc AMIA
    Symp 2002355-359.

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Guideline Model GLIF
  • Guideline Interchange Format
  • Origin Study collaboration in medical
    informatics
  • Now GLIF3
  • Very limited implementation
  • Guideline Flowchart of temporally ordered steps
  • Decision action steps
  • Concurrency Branch synchronization steps
  • Peleg M, Ogunyemi O, Tu S et al. Using features
    of Arden Syntax with object-oriented medical data
    models for guideline modeling. Proc AMIA Symp
    2001523-527.

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GLIF (continued) Levels of Abstraction
  • Conceptual Flowchart
  • Computable Patient data, algorithm flow,
    clinical actions specified
  • Implementable Executable instructions with
    mappings to local data

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Guideline Model GEM
  • Guideline Elements Model Current ASTM standard
  • Mark up of a narrative guideline into structured
    format using XML
  • Not procedural programming
  • Tool GEM Cutter
  • Resulting structure might be used to translate to
    executable version
  • Shiffman RN, Agrawal A, Deshpande AM, Gershkovich
    P. An approach to guideline implementation with
    GEM. Proc Medinfo 2001271-275.

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GEM (continued)
  • Model 100 discrete elements in 9 major
    branches
  • identity and developer, purpose, intended
    audience, development method, target population,
    testing, revision plan and knowledge components
  • Iterative refinement Adds elements not present
    verbatim but needed for execution
  • Customization Adding meta-knowledge
  • controlled vocabulary terms, input controls,
    prompts for data capture

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Infobutton Standard
  • Infobutton software that mediates between an
    information system (EHR) and a knowledge source
    (electronic textbook, drug reference, etc)
  • Goals
  • Standard interface to maximize access to
    knowledge sources
  • Tailored access to relevant bits
  • Status Under development (HL7).

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Order Set Standard
  • Order Set Document containing a group of orders
    for specific care episodes (disease states or
    presentations)
  • Examples Admission for chest pain
    community-acquired pneumonia
  • Features
  • Checklist Remind clinicians what to do
  • Advice Provide therapeutic options, dosing, etc
  • Goals Allow selection of parts or all of order
    set within a CPOE system. Facilitate sharing.
  • Current status (HL7) Under development

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Case Study / DemonstrationCedars-Sinai Medical
Center
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CSMC Characteristics
  • Academic medical center 800-bed campus in West
    LA founded 1902
  • 8500 employees 1800 physicians (200 UCLA
    faculty)
  • 45,000 discharges 28,000 clinic visits 77,000
    ED visits
  • Rankings USNWR, Hospitals Health Networks
  • Education
  • GME 300 residents/fellows
  • Health professions education UCLA, USC, CSU
  • Burns Allen Research Institute 80M/year

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EHR at CSMC
  • Components
  • CDR
  • HL7 communication interfaces (lab, imaging, etc)
  • Vocabulary server (CHARLIE using CTS)
  • Accessing data Electronic health records
  • Web/VS
  • Logician
  • Knowledge sources
  • Electronic textbooks
  • Bibliographic access
  • InfoButtons
  • Order Sets

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Laboratory
Pharmacy
Radiology
Data Warehouse
CDR
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Centricity Demonstration
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Summary
  • EHR needed
  • Many advantages, some disadvantages
  • Key integration of data
  • Aspects of the EHR Functions, advantages,
    disadvantages
  • Improving adoption
  • Standards, interoperability

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Additional Resources
  • Shortliffe Chapter 9 (new edition due 2006)
  • Degoulet P, Fieschi M. Managing patient records.
    Chapter 9 in Introduction to Clinical
    Informaitcs. New York Springer-Verlag,
    1997117-30.
  • van Bemmel JH, Musen MA. The patient record
    (chapter 7) Structuring the computer-based
    patient record (chapter 29) in Handbook of
    Medical Informatics. Houten, Netherlands
    Springer, 1997.
  • Bates DW, Ebell M, Gottlieb E et al. A proposal
    for electronic medical records U.S. primary care.
    J Am Med Inform Assoc 2003101-10.

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Additional Resources Web
  • www.astm.org
  • www.hl7.org
  • www.calrhio.org
  • www.cchit.org

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Thanks!
  • jenders_at_ucla.edu
  • http//jenders.bol.ucla.edu -gt Documents
    Presentations
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