2. 2
2003 M.D. (First-Class Honors)
2011 Ph.D. (Health Informatics), Univ. of Minnesota
Assistant Dean for Policy and Informatics
Lecturer, Department of Community Medicine
Faculty of Medicine Ramathibodi Hospital
Mahidol University
Interests: Health IT for Quality of Care, Social Media
IT Management, Security & Privacy
nawanan.the@mahidol.ac.th
SlideShare.net/Nawanan
นวนรรน ธีระอัมพรพันธุ์ (Nawanan Theera-Ampornpunt)
Line ID: NawananT
Introduction
3. 3
The Road to Digitizing Healthcare
What is a “Smart Hospital”?
Toward a “Smart” Hospital
Outline
10. 10
• Life-or-Death
• Difficult to automate human decisions
– Nature of business
– Many & varied stakeholders
– Evolving standards of care
• Fragmented, poorly-coordinated systems
• Large, ever-growing & changing body of
knowledge
• High volume, low resources, little time
Why Healthcare Isn’t (Yet) “Smart”?
11. 11
But...Are We That Different?
Input Process Output
Transfer
Banking
Value-Add
- Security
- Convenience
- Customer Service
Location A Location B
13. 13
Input Process Output
Patient Care
Health care
Sick Patient Well Patient
Value-Add
- Technology & medications
- Clinical knowledge & skilled providers
- Quality of care; process improvement
- Customer service
- Information
But...Are We That Different?
14. 14
• Large variations & contextual dependence
Input Process Output
Patient
Presentation
Decision-
Making
Biological
Responses
Standardizing Healthcare
15. 15
The World of Smart Machines
Image Sources: http://www.ibtimes.com/google-deepminds-alphago-
program-defeats-human-go-champion-first-time-ever-2283700
http://deepmind.com/
18. 18
• “Don’t implement technology just for
technology’s sake.”
• “Don’t make use of excellent technology.
Make excellent use of technology.”
(Tangwongsan, Supachai. Personal communication, 2005.)
• “Health care IT is not a panacea for all that ails
medicine.” (Hersh, 2004)
Some “Smart” Quotes
25. 25
Healthcare 1.0
• Thai Traditional Medicine in the Ancient Times
Healthcare 1.0 - 4.0 is the speaker’s personal opinion and may not represent official views of the Ministry of Public Health
Image & Caption Source: http://kanchanapisek.or.th/kp6/sub/book/book.php?book=33&chap=8&page=t33-8-detail.html
http://kanchanapisek.or.th/kp6/sub/book/book.php?book=33&chap=8&page=t33-8-infodetail02.html
การย่อยขนาดตัวยาสมุนไพร โดยใช้ครกตาและหินบดยา
ของโรงศิริราชพยาบาล (ปัจจุบันคือ โรงพยาบาลศิริราช)
คนไทยสมัยก่อนมักให้บุคคลในครอบครัวบีบนวดได้
26. 26
Healthcare 2.0
• Modern (Western) Medicine
Healthcare 1.0 - 4.0 is the speaker’s personal opinion and may not represent official views of the Ministry of Public Health
Image & Caption Source: http://kanchanapisek.or.th/kp6/sub/book/book.php?book=33&chap=8&page=t33-8-detail.html
http://kanchanapisek.or.th/kp6/sub/book/book.php?book=33&chap=8&page=t33-8-infodetail02.html
27. 27
Healthcare 3.0
• Quality-Driven Healthcare
Healthcare 1.0 - 4.0 is the speaker’s personal opinion and may not represent official views of the Ministry of Public Health
Image & Caption Source: http://kanchanapisek.or.th/kp6/sub/book/book.php?book=33&chap=8&page=t33-8-detail.html
http://kanchanapisek.or.th/kp6/sub/book/book.php?book=33&chap=8&page=t33-8-infodetail02.html
28. 28
Healthcare 4.0
• Smart Healthcare & Smart Hospital
Healthcare 1.0 - 4.0 is the speaker’s personal opinion and may not represent official views of the Ministry of Public Health
Image & Caption Source: http://kanchanapisek.or.th/kp6/sub/book/book.php?book=33&chap=8&page=t33-8-detail.html
http://kanchanapisek.or.th/kp6/sub/book/book.php?book=33&chap=8&page=t33-8-infodetail02.html
38. 38
To treat & to care
for their patients
to their best
abilities, given
limited time &
resources
Image Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Newborn_Examination_1967.jpg (Nevit Dilmen)
What Clinicians Want?
39. 39
• Safe
• Timely
• Effective
• Patient-Centered
• Efficient
• Equitable
Institute of Medicine, Committee on Quality of Health Care in America. Crossing the quality
chasm: a new health system for the 21st century. Washington, DC: National Academy
Press; 2001. 337 p.
High Quality Care
44. 44
• Safe
–Drug allergies
–Medication Reconciliation
• Timely
–Complete information at point of
care
• Effective
–Better clinical decision-making
Image Source: http://www.flickr.com/photos/childrensalliance/3191862260/
Being “Smart” in Healthcare
45. 45
• Efficient
–Faster care
–Time & cost savings
–Reducing unnecessary tests
• Equitable
–Access to providers & knowledge
• Patient-Centered
–Empowerment & better self-care
Being “Smart” in Healthcare
47. 47
• To Err is Human (IOM, 2000) reported
that:
– 44,000 to 98,000 people die in U.S.
hospitals each year as a result of
preventable medical mistakes
– Mistakes cost U.S. hospitals $17 billion to
$29 billion yearly
– Individual errors are not the main problem
– Faulty systems, processes, and other
conditions lead to preventable errors
Patient Safety
48. 48
Summary of These Reports
• Humans are not perfect and are bound to
make errors
• Highlight problems in U.S. health care
system that systematically contributes to
medical errors and poor quality
• Recommends reform
• Health IT plays a role in improving patient
safety
49. 49
Image Source: (Left) http://docwhisperer.wordpress.com/2007/05/31/sleepy-heads/
(Right) http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2008/12/05/health/chen_600.jpg
To Err is Human 1: Attention
50. 50Image Source: Suthan Srisangkaew, Department of Pathology, Facutly of Medicine Ramathibodi Hospital
To Err is Human 2: Memory
51. 51
• Cognitive Errors - Example: Decoy Pricing
The Economist Purchase Options
• Economist.com subscription $59
• Print subscription $125
• Print & web subscription $125
Ariely (2008)
16
0
84
The Economist Purchase Options
• Economist.com subscription $59
• Print & web subscription $125
68
32
# of
People
# of
People
To Err is Human 3: Cognition
52. 52
• It already happens....
(Mamede et al., 2010; Croskerry, 2003; Klein,
2005; Croskerry, 2013)
What If This Happens in Healthcare?
53. 53
Klein JG. Five pitfalls in decisions about diagnosis and prescribing. BMJ. 2005 Apr 2;330(7494):781-3.
“Everyone makes mistakes. But our reliance on
cognitive processes prone to bias makes
treatment errors more likely than we think”
Cognitive Biases in Healthcare
54. 54
• Medication Errors
–Drug Allergies
–Drug Interactions
• Ineffective or inappropriate treatment
• Redundant orders
• Failure to follow clinical practice guidelines
Common Errors
56. 56
External Memory
Knowledge Data
Long Term Memory
Knowledge Data
Inference
DECISION
PATIENT
Perception
Attention
Working
Memory
CLINICIAN
Elson, Faughnan & Connelly (1997)
Clinical Decision Making
61. 61
Why We Need ICT
in Healthcare?
#3: Because access to
high-quality patient information
should improve care
62. 62
Why We Need ICT
in Healthcare?
#4: Because healthcare at
all levels is fragmented &
in need of process
improvement
63. 63
Documented Values of Health IT
• Guideline adherence
• Better documentation
• Practitioner decision making or
process of care
• Medication safety
• Patient surveillance &
monitoring
• Patient education/reminder
65. 65
Use of information and communications
technology (ICT) in health & healthcare
settings
Source: The Health Resources and Services Administration, Department of Health
and Human Service, USA
Slide adapted from: Dr. Boonchai Kijsanayotin
Health IT
66. 66
Use of information and communications
technology (ICT) for health; Including
• Treating patients
• Conducting research
• Educating the health workforce
• Tracking diseases
• Monitoring public health.
Sources: 1) WHO Global Observatory of eHealth (GOe) (www.who.int/goe)
2) World Health Assembly, 2005. Resolution WHA58.28
Slide adapted from: Mark Landry, WHO WPRO & Dr. Boonchai Kijsanayotin
eHealth
67. 67
eHealth Health IT
Slide adapted from: Dr. Boonchai Kijsanayotin
eHealth & Health IT
69. 69
Hospital Information System (HIS) Computerized Physician Order Entry (CPOE)
Electronic
Health
Records
(EHRs)
Picture Archiving and
Communication System
(PACS)
Various Forms of Health IT
76. 76
• The Large N Interfaces Problem
N = 2, Interface = 1
# Interfaces = N(N-1)/2
N = 3, Interface = 3
N = 5, Interface = 10
N = 100, Interface = 4,950
Standards: Why?
77. 77
นวนรรน ธีระอัมพรพันธุ์. ตำนำนควำมเชื่อและข้อเท็จจริงเกี่ยวกับมำตรฐำนสำรสนเทศทำงสุขภำพ. ใน: Health
Data Standards Expo: From Reimbursement to Clinical Excellence; 2011 Aug 8-9; Bangkok,
Thailand. Bangkok (Thailand): Mahidol University, Faculty of Medicine Ramathibodi Hospital;
2011 Aug.
http://www.slideshare.net/nawanan/myths-and-truths-on-health-information-standards
Myths & Truths on Standards
78. 78
Myths
• We don’t need standards
• Standards are IT people’s jobs
• We should exclude vendors from this
• We need the same software to share data
• We need to always adopt international
standards
• We need to always use local standards
Theera-Ampornpunt (2011)
Myths & Truths on Standards
79. 79
Being Smart #5:
Go for Systems that Use
Standards, Not a Unified,
Conquer-the-World System
Image Source: http://www.denofgeek.com/movies/avengers/37236/why-loki-was-cut-from-avengers-age-of-ultron
80. 80
The Road to Digitizing Healthcare
What is a “Smart Hospital”?
Toward a “Smart” Hospital
Outline
84. 84
Clinical Decision Support Systems
• CDSS as a replacement or supplement of
clinicians?
– The demise of the “Greek Oracle” model (Miller & Masarie, 1990)
The “Greek Oracle” Model
The “Fundamental Theorem” Model
Friedman (2009)
Wrong Assumption
Correct Assumption
91. 91
2003 M.D. (First-Class Honors)
2011 Ph.D. (Health Informatics), Univ. of Minnesota
Assistant Dean for Policy and Informatics
Lecturer, Department of Community Medicine
Faculty of Medicine Ramathibodi Hospital
Mahidol University
Interests: Health IT for Quality of Care, Social Media
IT Management, Security & Privacy
nawanan.the@mahidol.ac.th
SlideShare.net/Nawanan
นวนรรน ธีระอัมพรพันธุ์ (Nawanan Theera-Ampornpunt)
Line ID: NawananT
Q&A