Title: Electronic Health Records
1Electronic 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
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4Overview EMRs
- Using the EMR Why we need it
- History aspects of the EMR
- Adoption
- Barriers
- Improving adoption standards, interoperability
- Case study CSMC
- Demonstration Centricity
5Need 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.
6Need 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.
7Examples 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.
8Examples (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.
9Summary 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
10Definitions
- 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
11Uses 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
12Characterizing 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
13Characterizing the RecordRepresenting the
Patients True State
- Completeness Proportion of observations
actually recorded - 67 - 100
- Correctness Proportion of recorded observations
that are correct - 67 - 100
14Functional 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
15 Laboratory
Pharmacy
Radiology
Data Warehouse
CDR
16History 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)
17Trend 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
18Who Enters Data
- Clerk
- Physician Primary, consultant, extender
- Nurse
- Therapist
- Lab reports/ancillary systems
- Machines Monitors, POC testing
19Fundamental 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
20Data 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
21Weakness 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
22Advantages 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
23Advantages 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
24Advantages 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
25Advantages 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.
26Key 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
27Disadvantages 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
28Examples 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)
29Classical EMRs (continued)
- RMRS McDonald (IU), 1974
- TMR Stead Hammond (Duke), 1975
- STOR Whiting-OKeefe (UCSF), 1985
30Adoption
- 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
31Barriers 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
32Improving 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
33Improving 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
34CCR HEADER
CCR BODY
CCR FOOTER
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36Improving 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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39Improving 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
40Improving 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
41Improving 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
42Improving 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)
-
43HL7 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
44Standard 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
45Standard 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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47Standard 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
48Common 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.
49Arden 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.
50Guideline 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.
51GLIF (continued) Levels of Abstraction
- Conceptual Flowchart
- Computable Patient data, algorithm flow,
clinical actions specified - Implementable Executable instructions with
mappings to local data
52Guideline 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.
53GEM (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
54Infobutton 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).
55Order 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
56Case Study / DemonstrationCedars-Sinai Medical
Center
57CSMC 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
58EHR 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
59 Laboratory
Pharmacy
Radiology
Data Warehouse
CDR
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71Centricity Demonstration
72Summary
- EHR needed
- Many advantages, some disadvantages
- Key integration of data
- Aspects of the EHR Functions, advantages,
disadvantages - Improving adoption
- Standards, interoperability
73Additional 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.
74Additional Resources Web
- www.astm.org
- www.hl7.org
- www.calrhio.org
- www.cchit.org
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76Thanks!
- jenders_at_ucla.edu
- http//jenders.bol.ucla.edu -gt Documents
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