Ict and The Informatics Connection
Ict and The Informatics Connection
Lecture 1
Understanding Develop
diseases and and test
their treatment treatments
Patient-specific
Decision-making to
optimise and
personalise treatment
Clinical
engagement, post-
marketing
surveillance, data
mining
Health
Records
Service Ensure right
delivery, Patients receive
performance right
assessment intervention
First …
• Capture your
data, accurately,
completely
• Make the data
readily accessible
The paper record, pros
• Portable
• Familiar and easy to use
– Exploits everyday skills of visual search,
browsing etc
• Natural: “direct” access to clinical data
– Handwriting
– Charts, graphs
– Drawings, images…
The paper record: cons
• Can only be used for one task at a time
– If 2 people need notes one must wait
– Can lead to long waits (unavailable up to 30% of time
in some studies)
• Records can get lost
• Consume space
• Large individual records are hard to use
• Fragile and susceptible to damage
• Environmental cost
Electronic health records
• An electronic health record is
a repository of information
about a single person in a
medical setting, including
clinical, demographic and
other data.
• The repository resides in a
system specifically designed
to support users by
– providing accessibility to
complete and accurate data
– may include services to provide
alerts, reminders, links to
medical knowledge and other
aids to clinical practice.
The electronic medical record
Examples
Driving Factor to Adopt an EMR
• Different charting methods in different
offices
• Growing practice – adding new docs
• Rising transcription costs - $250k/year in
1998 and going up
• Need to enhance quality of care
• Reduce practice overhead
Goals of Using the EMR
• Provide a single, uniform medical record.
• Ability to access medical records from any
location.
• Improve documentation and coding.
• Improve research / clinical trials data /
enhance quality.
• Reduce transcription and other rising costs.
Functions of the EHR (1)
1. Supports structured data collection using a defined
vocabulary.
2. Accessible at any or all times by authorized individuals.
3. Contains a problem list - patient’s clinical problems and
current status
4. Supports systematic measurement and recording of data to
promote precise and routine assessment of the outcomes
of patient care
5. States the logical basis for all diagnoses or conclusions as
a means of documenting the clinical rationale for decisions
about the management of the patient’s care.
Functions of the EHR (2)
1. Can be linked with other clinical records of a patient—from various
settings and time periods—to provide a longitudinal (i.e. lifelong)
record of events that may have influenced a person’s health.
2. Can assist the process of clinical problem solving by providing
clinicians with decision analysis tools, clinical reminders, prognostic
risk assessment and other clinical aids.
3. Can be linked to both local and remote databases of knowledge, literature
and bibliography or administrative databases and systems so that
such information is readily available to assist practitioners in decision
making.
4. Addresses patient data confidentiality.
5. Can help practitioners and health care institutions manage the quality
and costs of care.
Benefits Realized
• Staff to physician ratio decreased below national
ratio average.