Excellent deck making the case that exchange of health data (interoperation, interoperability) should be encouraged through simple exchange mechanisms.
Medical transcription and its importance for healthcare professionalsbobkruse
Medical transcription involves converting physicians’ dictations into the required file formats. Service providers help improve the efficiency and productivity of healthcare practices.
Medical Transcription is a process of converting physician dictated audio into text format. Physician dictation would include any type of medical treatment, procedure, diagnosis etc.
These documents should be recorded into patient’s permanent medical record.
This document discusses data residency for electronic health records (EHR) systems. It examines where patient and provider medical documents and data reside currently and may reside in the future. It outlines that currently, patient documents reside with the patient and provider, while provider documents and data reside within the provider's EHR system. It envisions that in the future, patients may have portable medical records on smart cards or cloud-based systems, while provider data continues to reside in provider EHR systems with connections to other entities like insurers and laboratories.
This document discusses different methods for creating patient records, including handwriting, dictation, structured data entry using electronic medical records (EMRs), and speech recognition technologies. It notes that while EMRs have advantages, direct data entry by physicians is time-consuming. Dictation allows physicians to focus on patients rather than documentation and is the most efficient method. Outsourcing transcription to a medical transcription service can save costs compared to in-house transcription or physicians directly entering notes. The document promotes the services offered by TranScribe Medical Transcription.
Healthstory Project Overview - Dictation To Clinical Data For AHDINick van Terheyden
The document discusses the Health Story Project, which aims to automatically generate structured and encoded clinical documents from dictation. This would enable dictation to continue as physicians' preferred documentation method while also making the information accessible in electronic health records. The project transforms dictation into clinical documents compliant with HL7 standards. Members advocate expanding meaningful use to recognize use of EHRs integrated with dictation via Health Story standards. This would bridge narrative notes and structured data, improving documentation quality and enabling uses like clinical decision support.
Healthstory Enabling The Emr - Dictation To Clinical DataNick van Terheyden
EHRs are database centric while medical records are document centric. The conventional wisdom is that documents are bad and discrete data is good. Historically, clinicians have resisted efforts to establish structured data standards for dictated reports. This lack of an industry-wide standard for report content and format confounds interoperability efforts. For nearly two decades, information system specialists have attempted to impose new documentation methods that are more suited to database management but do not meet the needs of the practicing physician. Achieving physician buy-in for electronic record systems that do not accommodate narrative documentation methods such as dictation and transcription has proven to be quite difficult for many EHR vendors.
The Health Story Project (formerly the CDA4CDT initiative Clinical Document Architecture for Common Data Types) is an alliance of organizations that have been working together with HL7 for nearly two years to develop and publish data standards for electronic clinical documents. The initiative is based on Clinical Document Architecture (CDA) - a balloted HL7 document markup standard that specifies the structure and semantics of a clinical document for the purpose of exchange. Document templates for the most commonly dictated report types (H&P, Consult, Operative Note, etc) specify required and optional headings. Templates are developed based on prevailing practice and establish consensus on content and format
Presented a paper by Mario Kovac on E Health. Where He proposed a very comprehensive framework for healthcare interoperability. These slides contain brief description of mario's work.
Medical transcription and its importance for healthcare professionalsbobkruse
Medical transcription involves converting physicians’ dictations into the required file formats. Service providers help improve the efficiency and productivity of healthcare practices.
Medical Transcription is a process of converting physician dictated audio into text format. Physician dictation would include any type of medical treatment, procedure, diagnosis etc.
These documents should be recorded into patient’s permanent medical record.
This document discusses data residency for electronic health records (EHR) systems. It examines where patient and provider medical documents and data reside currently and may reside in the future. It outlines that currently, patient documents reside with the patient and provider, while provider documents and data reside within the provider's EHR system. It envisions that in the future, patients may have portable medical records on smart cards or cloud-based systems, while provider data continues to reside in provider EHR systems with connections to other entities like insurers and laboratories.
This document discusses different methods for creating patient records, including handwriting, dictation, structured data entry using electronic medical records (EMRs), and speech recognition technologies. It notes that while EMRs have advantages, direct data entry by physicians is time-consuming. Dictation allows physicians to focus on patients rather than documentation and is the most efficient method. Outsourcing transcription to a medical transcription service can save costs compared to in-house transcription or physicians directly entering notes. The document promotes the services offered by TranScribe Medical Transcription.
Healthstory Project Overview - Dictation To Clinical Data For AHDINick van Terheyden
The document discusses the Health Story Project, which aims to automatically generate structured and encoded clinical documents from dictation. This would enable dictation to continue as physicians' preferred documentation method while also making the information accessible in electronic health records. The project transforms dictation into clinical documents compliant with HL7 standards. Members advocate expanding meaningful use to recognize use of EHRs integrated with dictation via Health Story standards. This would bridge narrative notes and structured data, improving documentation quality and enabling uses like clinical decision support.
Healthstory Enabling The Emr - Dictation To Clinical DataNick van Terheyden
EHRs are database centric while medical records are document centric. The conventional wisdom is that documents are bad and discrete data is good. Historically, clinicians have resisted efforts to establish structured data standards for dictated reports. This lack of an industry-wide standard for report content and format confounds interoperability efforts. For nearly two decades, information system specialists have attempted to impose new documentation methods that are more suited to database management but do not meet the needs of the practicing physician. Achieving physician buy-in for electronic record systems that do not accommodate narrative documentation methods such as dictation and transcription has proven to be quite difficult for many EHR vendors.
The Health Story Project (formerly the CDA4CDT initiative Clinical Document Architecture for Common Data Types) is an alliance of organizations that have been working together with HL7 for nearly two years to develop and publish data standards for electronic clinical documents. The initiative is based on Clinical Document Architecture (CDA) - a balloted HL7 document markup standard that specifies the structure and semantics of a clinical document for the purpose of exchange. Document templates for the most commonly dictated report types (H&P, Consult, Operative Note, etc) specify required and optional headings. Templates are developed based on prevailing practice and establish consensus on content and format
Presented a paper by Mario Kovac on E Health. Where He proposed a very comprehensive framework for healthcare interoperability. These slides contain brief description of mario's work.
The document discusses proposals for developing healthcare information sharing infrastructure and solutions across multiple healthcare providers in New Jersey. It proposes a partnership between Newark Beth Israel Medical Center and other hospitals, clinics, nursing homes and healthcare organizations to create a healthcare information exchange. It describes two potential models for this exchange and the key components, including physician and patient portals, clinical data repositories, standards-based integration, and a universal patient transfer form. The goal is to improve care coordination, access to patient information, and health outcomes across the healthcare system.
HIPAA has changed the way fax-based communication must work. Protection of inbound faxes, manual delivery of paper faxes and lack of a consolidated audit trail making paper-based faxing risky and costly. There is a way to maintain solve these problems and still use faxing when needed. Find out how in this slideshare deck on improving the security of fax-based health communication.
In this slideshare, you’ll learn:
1.How HIPAA impacts faxing
2.Alternatives to paper-based faxing
3.How these alternatives support HIPAA compliance
MediTrans is a medical transcription business model that breaks transcription work into discrete microtasks suitable for mobile workers. Physicians' patient audio recordings, typically 2-5 minutes long, are distributed to microworkers who transcribe them into text format. The transcripts are quality checked and collated by patient before being returned to the client in digital format. Microworkers can earn $0.20-$1 per minute of transcription, providing an opportunity to earn $6-24 per month. The model leverages the large network of mobile workers while addressing challenges like quality control and medical terminology requirements.
mMD.net is an electronic health record and practice management software with features including health information exchange, a patient portal, mobile access, and integration with other systems. It uses a services-oriented architecture and can automatically share patient medical records between providers to facilitate referrals and consultations.
Medical transcription involves translating oral dictation into written medical records. It serves to document patient care and facilitate healthcare services. Physicians verbally dictate notes which transcriptionists transcribe to save time. Training for medical transcription involves extensive study of medical terminology and body systems. The field provides accurate documentation of patient histories but faces challenges regarding available trained professionals and competitive salaries.
Speech Understanding – The Key To Unlocking Clinical Knowledge Delivering Sa...Nick van Terheyden
This document discusses challenges facing clinicians including burnout, workload, and bureaucracy hindering quality care delivery. It outlines problems with current electronic health records (EHRs) requiring structured data entry that is time-consuming and lacks flexibility, while transcription can be expensive. The document proposes using speech recognition technology to generate structured clinical documents from dictation, encoding clinical data without changing physician workflow to reduce costs and improve data capture for decision support, quality measures, and interoperability.
HIPAA HITECH Privacy & Security Rules for E-prescribing
Disclaimer
The materials available on this document and web site are for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal and or clinical advice.
You should contact your attorney and information security officer to obtain proper advice with respect to any particular issue or problem. Use of and access to this document or any of the e-mail links, materials, etc., contained within the document do not create an attorney-client relationship, consulting between the authors, legal and / or medical advice . between the user or browser. Only guidance from U.S. Government agencies directly should be used.for decision making.
1) The document discusses patient portals and how they can improve patient care and engagement. It provides examples of how portals allow patients to communicate electronically with their doctors, access their health records, and manage their care outside of visits.
2) Studies show portals may help reduce A1c levels in diabetes patients through more engaged care, though more research is still needed.
3) Doctors are advised to obtain informed consent from patients for electronic communication and establish response times to improve satisfaction. When set up properly, portals can enhance care without overburdening physicians.
In this tutorial participants will learn the history of the RIM, the method by which the RIM is maintained, and key characteristics of the RIM that make it the premier information model in healthcare.
Topics Covered:
1. Introduction to HL7: who, what, and why
2. Introduction to HL7 v3: what and why
3. History of the HL7 Reference Information Model
4. HL7 RIM Subjects, Core Classes, and Structural Attributes
5. State Machines of RIM Core Classes
6. HL7 v3 Datatypes
7. HL7 v3 Vocabulary
This tutorial will assist in preparation for the HL7 v3 Certification exam.
MeDoc is a simple to use Docter-Patient mobile app that acts as an all-in-one clinic or hospital management software which keeps track of everything that is from staff details to patient history.
Gardoe M. Cephas is a clinically certified medical assistant seeking a position that utilizes their experience in electronic medical records retrieval, medical data abstraction, scanning, and data entry while upholding HIPAA compliance. They have over 10 years of experience working in medical records, home health care, and as a medical assistant. Their education includes an Associate in Health Information Management degree through Rasmussen College in addition to medical assistant training and certification.
City of hope research informatics common data elementsAbdul-Malik Shakir
This document discusses City of Hope's Research Informatics Common Data Elements (RI-CDE) and Research Informatics Enterprise Architecture Framework (RI-EAF). The RI-CDE is a repository that harmonizes common data elements and their relationships to enable decision support and interoperability. The RI-EAF is an architectural framework based on standards like TOGAF and HL7 that facilitates research information systems. It then analyzes diagnosis workflows and systems, identifies issues, and proposes improvements like leveraging the data warehouse to collect quality metrics.
Speech Understanding Dictation To Clinical Data - TEPR 2009Nick van Terheyden
Speech Understanding automatically converts the spoken work into structured and encoded clinical data that provides access to relevant diagnostic support, evidence based medicine and real time alerts.
Unlocking the data tucked away in the vast mountain of documents produced as part of delivering care to patients is possible today with Speech Understanding, the next generation of speech recognition technology that not only improves the overall efficiency of the documentation process by producing higher quality, more accurate clinical data but also produces structured encoded clinical data that can populate EMR’s that are crying out for high quality input. This information is encoded using the HL7’s Clinical Document Architecture (CDA) and Common Document Types (CDA4CDT).
With knowledge of the meaning the output from Speech Understanding is now able to identify concepts, organize documents into meaningful categories and create a semantically interoperable document .
This document summarizes the design and development of a secure electronic health record (EHR) system that incorporates AES encryption. The system was designed using formal software engineering and database development methodologies. Key aspects of the design include defining entity relationships in an ER diagram, normalizing database tables, and implementing user authentication and encryption of sensitive data. The system provides role-based access and allows physicians, nurses and staff to securely view and update patient records.
The “meaningful use” journey can progress through various twists, turns, stalls, restarts, frustrations, elations and finally relief and satisfaction from a job well done. Proof abounds that project tenacity trumps despair and that early adopters are enthusiastic about electronic health records (EHR), and even eagerly anticipate the next stages of Meaningful Use objectives.
Rather than opt medical transcription outsourcing, some healthcare institutions try to put the burden of documentation on physicians, which affects their productivity.
This document provides information about the creative team of Kaiser Permanente. It discusses the three main categories of work produced: promotional, informational, and strategic. For each category, it describes the purpose, concepts created, and creative process involved. The goal of all the work is to support Kaiser Permanente's mission of improving health and service.
The Hospital is an Institute which provides to people best health services.
That Provides Facility for hospitalization.
The patient is admitted in hospital with the exception that he or she will be in the
hospital for more Than 24 hours.
The Patient is assigned a room /bed.
The Hospital Provide Medical care.
The document describes a report submitted by a group of students from Bharati Vidyapeeth College of Engineering on an "Integrated Health Information Platform". The report provides an introduction to the need for integrated health information systems and discusses key aspects of an integrated platform such as electronic medical records, electronic health records, how the platform would work, advantages, and implementation. It aims to present information on applying information technology to healthcare to create a nationalized healthcare database.
Chapter 6 Health Information ExchangeRobert Hoyt MDWilliam .docxrobertad6
Health information exchange (HIE) allows electronic sharing of patient health data between organizations according to national standards. HIE can improve care coordination but faces challenges such as cost and competition between organizations. Emerging models like FHIR and blockchain may address these challenges by using open source approaches and distributed ledgers. Standards are crucial for HIE and interoperability by establishing common rules for data sharing through identifiers, transactions, messages, imaging and terminology.
Building a consensus for the electronic health recordNursing353
This document discusses building consensus for electronic health records (EHRs). It begins by defining EHRs and distinguishing them from electronic medical records (EMRs). The document outlines the benefits of EHRs, such as reducing medical errors, improving patient outcomes, and empowering patients. It also discusses meaningful use standards and key aspects of EHR implementation like computerized physician order entry. Overall, the document emphasizes that successful EHR adoption requires thorough preparation, customized training, and comprehensive security planning.
The document discusses proposals for developing healthcare information sharing infrastructure and solutions across multiple healthcare providers in New Jersey. It proposes a partnership between Newark Beth Israel Medical Center and other hospitals, clinics, nursing homes and healthcare organizations to create a healthcare information exchange. It describes two potential models for this exchange and the key components, including physician and patient portals, clinical data repositories, standards-based integration, and a universal patient transfer form. The goal is to improve care coordination, access to patient information, and health outcomes across the healthcare system.
HIPAA has changed the way fax-based communication must work. Protection of inbound faxes, manual delivery of paper faxes and lack of a consolidated audit trail making paper-based faxing risky and costly. There is a way to maintain solve these problems and still use faxing when needed. Find out how in this slideshare deck on improving the security of fax-based health communication.
In this slideshare, you’ll learn:
1.How HIPAA impacts faxing
2.Alternatives to paper-based faxing
3.How these alternatives support HIPAA compliance
MediTrans is a medical transcription business model that breaks transcription work into discrete microtasks suitable for mobile workers. Physicians' patient audio recordings, typically 2-5 minutes long, are distributed to microworkers who transcribe them into text format. The transcripts are quality checked and collated by patient before being returned to the client in digital format. Microworkers can earn $0.20-$1 per minute of transcription, providing an opportunity to earn $6-24 per month. The model leverages the large network of mobile workers while addressing challenges like quality control and medical terminology requirements.
mMD.net is an electronic health record and practice management software with features including health information exchange, a patient portal, mobile access, and integration with other systems. It uses a services-oriented architecture and can automatically share patient medical records between providers to facilitate referrals and consultations.
Medical transcription involves translating oral dictation into written medical records. It serves to document patient care and facilitate healthcare services. Physicians verbally dictate notes which transcriptionists transcribe to save time. Training for medical transcription involves extensive study of medical terminology and body systems. The field provides accurate documentation of patient histories but faces challenges regarding available trained professionals and competitive salaries.
Speech Understanding – The Key To Unlocking Clinical Knowledge Delivering Sa...Nick van Terheyden
This document discusses challenges facing clinicians including burnout, workload, and bureaucracy hindering quality care delivery. It outlines problems with current electronic health records (EHRs) requiring structured data entry that is time-consuming and lacks flexibility, while transcription can be expensive. The document proposes using speech recognition technology to generate structured clinical documents from dictation, encoding clinical data without changing physician workflow to reduce costs and improve data capture for decision support, quality measures, and interoperability.
HIPAA HITECH Privacy & Security Rules for E-prescribing
Disclaimer
The materials available on this document and web site are for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal and or clinical advice.
You should contact your attorney and information security officer to obtain proper advice with respect to any particular issue or problem. Use of and access to this document or any of the e-mail links, materials, etc., contained within the document do not create an attorney-client relationship, consulting between the authors, legal and / or medical advice . between the user or browser. Only guidance from U.S. Government agencies directly should be used.for decision making.
1) The document discusses patient portals and how they can improve patient care and engagement. It provides examples of how portals allow patients to communicate electronically with their doctors, access their health records, and manage their care outside of visits.
2) Studies show portals may help reduce A1c levels in diabetes patients through more engaged care, though more research is still needed.
3) Doctors are advised to obtain informed consent from patients for electronic communication and establish response times to improve satisfaction. When set up properly, portals can enhance care without overburdening physicians.
In this tutorial participants will learn the history of the RIM, the method by which the RIM is maintained, and key characteristics of the RIM that make it the premier information model in healthcare.
Topics Covered:
1. Introduction to HL7: who, what, and why
2. Introduction to HL7 v3: what and why
3. History of the HL7 Reference Information Model
4. HL7 RIM Subjects, Core Classes, and Structural Attributes
5. State Machines of RIM Core Classes
6. HL7 v3 Datatypes
7. HL7 v3 Vocabulary
This tutorial will assist in preparation for the HL7 v3 Certification exam.
MeDoc is a simple to use Docter-Patient mobile app that acts as an all-in-one clinic or hospital management software which keeps track of everything that is from staff details to patient history.
Gardoe M. Cephas is a clinically certified medical assistant seeking a position that utilizes their experience in electronic medical records retrieval, medical data abstraction, scanning, and data entry while upholding HIPAA compliance. They have over 10 years of experience working in medical records, home health care, and as a medical assistant. Their education includes an Associate in Health Information Management degree through Rasmussen College in addition to medical assistant training and certification.
City of hope research informatics common data elementsAbdul-Malik Shakir
This document discusses City of Hope's Research Informatics Common Data Elements (RI-CDE) and Research Informatics Enterprise Architecture Framework (RI-EAF). The RI-CDE is a repository that harmonizes common data elements and their relationships to enable decision support and interoperability. The RI-EAF is an architectural framework based on standards like TOGAF and HL7 that facilitates research information systems. It then analyzes diagnosis workflows and systems, identifies issues, and proposes improvements like leveraging the data warehouse to collect quality metrics.
Speech Understanding Dictation To Clinical Data - TEPR 2009Nick van Terheyden
Speech Understanding automatically converts the spoken work into structured and encoded clinical data that provides access to relevant diagnostic support, evidence based medicine and real time alerts.
Unlocking the data tucked away in the vast mountain of documents produced as part of delivering care to patients is possible today with Speech Understanding, the next generation of speech recognition technology that not only improves the overall efficiency of the documentation process by producing higher quality, more accurate clinical data but also produces structured encoded clinical data that can populate EMR’s that are crying out for high quality input. This information is encoded using the HL7’s Clinical Document Architecture (CDA) and Common Document Types (CDA4CDT).
With knowledge of the meaning the output from Speech Understanding is now able to identify concepts, organize documents into meaningful categories and create a semantically interoperable document .
This document summarizes the design and development of a secure electronic health record (EHR) system that incorporates AES encryption. The system was designed using formal software engineering and database development methodologies. Key aspects of the design include defining entity relationships in an ER diagram, normalizing database tables, and implementing user authentication and encryption of sensitive data. The system provides role-based access and allows physicians, nurses and staff to securely view and update patient records.
The “meaningful use” journey can progress through various twists, turns, stalls, restarts, frustrations, elations and finally relief and satisfaction from a job well done. Proof abounds that project tenacity trumps despair and that early adopters are enthusiastic about electronic health records (EHR), and even eagerly anticipate the next stages of Meaningful Use objectives.
Rather than opt medical transcription outsourcing, some healthcare institutions try to put the burden of documentation on physicians, which affects their productivity.
This document provides information about the creative team of Kaiser Permanente. It discusses the three main categories of work produced: promotional, informational, and strategic. For each category, it describes the purpose, concepts created, and creative process involved. The goal of all the work is to support Kaiser Permanente's mission of improving health and service.
The Hospital is an Institute which provides to people best health services.
That Provides Facility for hospitalization.
The patient is admitted in hospital with the exception that he or she will be in the
hospital for more Than 24 hours.
The Patient is assigned a room /bed.
The Hospital Provide Medical care.
The document describes a report submitted by a group of students from Bharati Vidyapeeth College of Engineering on an "Integrated Health Information Platform". The report provides an introduction to the need for integrated health information systems and discusses key aspects of an integrated platform such as electronic medical records, electronic health records, how the platform would work, advantages, and implementation. It aims to present information on applying information technology to healthcare to create a nationalized healthcare database.
Chapter 6 Health Information ExchangeRobert Hoyt MDWilliam .docxrobertad6
Health information exchange (HIE) allows electronic sharing of patient health data between organizations according to national standards. HIE can improve care coordination but faces challenges such as cost and competition between organizations. Emerging models like FHIR and blockchain may address these challenges by using open source approaches and distributed ledgers. Standards are crucial for HIE and interoperability by establishing common rules for data sharing through identifiers, transactions, messages, imaging and terminology.
Building a consensus for the electronic health recordNursing353
This document discusses building consensus for electronic health records (EHRs). It begins by defining EHRs and distinguishing them from electronic medical records (EMRs). The document outlines the benefits of EHRs, such as reducing medical errors, improving patient outcomes, and empowering patients. It also discusses meaningful use standards and key aspects of EHR implementation like computerized physician order entry. Overall, the document emphasizes that successful EHR adoption requires thorough preparation, customized training, and comprehensive security planning.
Building a consensus for the electronic health recordtschenf
This document discusses building consensus for electronic health records (EHRs). It begins by defining EHRs and distinguishing them from electronic medical records (EMRs). The document outlines the benefits of EHRs, such as reducing medical errors, improving patient outcomes, and empowering patients. It also discusses meaningful use standards and key aspects of EHR implementation like computerized physician order entry. Overall, the document emphasizes that successful EHR adoption requires thorough preparation, customized training, and comprehensive security planning.
Building a consensus for the electronic health recordtschenf
This document discusses building consensus for electronic health records (EHRs). It begins by defining EHRs and distinguishing them from electronic medical records (EMRs). The document outlines the benefits of EHRs, such as reducing medical errors, improving patient outcomes, and empowering patients. It also discusses meaningful use standards and key aspects of EHR implementation like computerized physician order entry. Overall, the document emphasizes that successful EHR adoption requires thorough preparation, customized training, and comprehensive security planning.
Building a consensus for the electronic health recordNursing353
This document discusses building consensus for electronic health records (EHRs). It begins by defining EHRs and distinguishing them from electronic medical records (EMRs). The document outlines the benefits of EHRs, such as reducing medical errors, improving patient outcomes, and empowering patients. It also discusses meaningful use standards and key aspects of EHR implementation like computerized physician order entry. Overall, the document emphasizes that successful EHR adoption requires thorough preparation, customized training, and comprehensive security planning.
This document discusses key standards for health information exchange and interoperability. It describes three stages of meaningful use that aim to improve healthcare quality, safety, and privacy. The document also presents a case example where a patient's medical history from one hospital was unavailable during an emergency at another hospital due to lack of interoperability. It proposes a PHIT application that would enable data exchange between different electronic health record systems using standards like HL7, FHIR, and SNOMED to address this issue.
Electronic Health Records: purpose of electronic health records, popular electronic health record system, advantages of electronic records, challenges of electronic health records, the key players involved.
Discussion for Week 4SubscribeTopic Explain the data i.docxmadlynplamondon
Discussion for Week 4
Subscribe
Topic: Explain the data interchange standards required to enable the flow of the
information.
As part of the Stage 2 assignment, you will identify Data Interchange Standards the
Midtown Family Clinic EHR system will use to exchange information with external
organizations. For this discussion, we will explore several different Data
Interchange Standards, or "Interoperability Standards" as the ONC defines them.
First to understand the top challenges in sharing data, read
http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/fact-
sheets/2016/11/electronic-health-records-patient-matching-and-data-
standardization-remain-top-challenges This article highlights the need for data
standardization. Next, you will become familiar with the Interoperability Standards
Advisory published and maintained by the Office of the National Coordinator for
Health Information Technology (ONC) https://www.healthit.gov/isa/ The purpose
of the Advisory, as stated on the website is shown below.
The Interoperability Standards Advisory (ISA) is meant to serve at least the following
purposes:
1. To provide the industry with a single, public list of the standards and
implementation specifications that can best be used to address specific
clinical health information interoperability needs. Currently, the ISA is focused
on interoperability for sharing information between entities and not on intra-
organizational uses.
2. To reflect the results of ongoing dialogue, debate, and consensus among
industry stakeholders when more than one standard or implementation
specification could be used to address a specific interoperability need,
discussion will take place through the ISA public comments process. The web-
version of the ISA will improve upon existing processes, making comments
more transparent, and allowing for threaded discussions to promote further
dialogue.
http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/fact-sheets/2016/11/electronic-health-records-patient-matching-and-data-standardization-remain-top-challenges
https://www.healthit.gov/isa/
3. To document known limitations, preconditions, and dependencies as well as
provide suggestions for security best practices in the form of security patterns
for referenced standards and implementation specifications when they are
used to address a specific clinical health IT interoperability need."
GROUP 4: From the many different standards listed in the Advisory, choose one
that has not yet been posted and:
1. Put the Title of the standard in the Subject line for your posting.
2. Conduct some additional research and explain:
a. What the standard is
b. What the standard is used for
c. Why it is important
GROUPS 1, 2 and 3: For at least two postings,
1. Conduct your own research on the standard
2. Critically evaluate and respond to the explanation provided for:
a. What the standard is
b. What the standard is used for
c. Why it is important
3. Provide at least one additional comme ...
Healthstory Enabling The Emr Dictation To Clinical DataNick van Terheyden
EHRs are database centric while medical records are document centric. The conventional wisdom is that documents are bad and discrete data is good. Historically, clinicians have resisted efforts to establish structured data standards for dictated reports. This lack of an industry-wide standard for report content and format confounds interoperability efforts. For nearly two decades, information system specialists have attempted to impose new documentation methods that are more suited to database management but do not meet the needs of the practicing physician. Achieving physician buy-in for electronic record systems that do not accommodate narrative documentation methods such as dictation and transcription has proven to be quite difficult for many EHR vendors
The Health Story Project (formerly the CDA4CDT initiative Clinical Document Architecture for Common Data Types) is an alliance of organizations that have been working together with HL7 for nearly two years to develop and publish data standards for electronic clinical documents. The initiative is based on Clinical Document Architecture (CDA) - a balloted HL7 document markup standard that specifies the structure and semantics of a clinical document for the purpose of exchange. Document templates for the most commonly dictated report types (H&P, Consult, Operative Note, etc) specify required and optional headings. Templates are developed based on prevailing practice and establish consensus on content and format
Module 1Discussion question 1Consider the following scenario Y.docxannandleola
Module 1/Discussion question 1
Consider the following scenario: You are in a hospital setting with various departments such as admissions, emergency, radiology, pharmacy, etc. As mentioned in the module readings, one factor that makes health care such a complex field is that there are numerous types of health care data spanning a broad spectrum Below are some pertinent questions that are essential to a data management professional in relation to data.
Summarize your responses to these questions and post your summary into the Discussion Forum. Compare your ideas with those of your colleagues.
1) What types of data might be found in the environment mentioned above?
2) What would be their categories in terms of data type and how will the data be collected?
3) What would be the rationale why the data is categorized in that manner?
4) What would be some of the appropriate strategies that can be utilized to deal with the management of any barriers, facilitators, and challenges during the data collection process and analysis?
5) Which are some of the areas that will require improvement?
6) What will be the potential benefits of the improvement in these areas?
7) Why do you think this modification has not been previously made?
Note: For this discussion question, review Module 1 Readings and apply your personal or work experiences.
My Reply
In a hospital setting with various departments, a
number of data can be accessed and retrieved within the different departments. Clinical data is a staple resource for most health and
medical research. Clinical data is either collected during the course of
ongoing patient care or as part of a formal clinical trial program. Clinical data
falls into six major types; Electronic health records;Administrative data; Claims data; Disease registries; Health surveys; Clinical trials data. Clinical research data may be available through national or
discipline-specific organizations. Level of access is likely restricted but
available through proper channels. Electronic
health record is the purest type of electronic clinical data which is
obtained at the point of care at a medical facility, hospital, clinic or
practice. Often referred to as the electronic medical record (EMR), the EMR is
generally not available to outside researchers. The data collected includes
administrative and demographic information, diagnosis, treatment, prescription
drugs, laboratory tests, hospitalization, patient insurance, etc.
Administrative date is often associated with electronic health records; these
are primarily hospital discharge data reported to a government agency like AHRQ. Claims data describe the billable interactions
(insurance claims) between insured patients and the healthcare delivery system.
Claims data falls into four general categories: inpatient, outpatient,
pharmacy, and enrollment. The sources of claims data can be obtained from the
government (e.g., Medicare) and/or commercial health firms (e.g., United
HealthCare).
M ...
The document discusses several key points about electronic health records (EHRs):
1) Currently, none of the EHR vendors meet federal requirements because their systems are not interoperable between each other.
2) For EHRs to have value, they must be interconnected and allow information to be shared between different providers and organizations through regional and national health information networks.
3) A network of interconnected EHRs has much higher value than individual systems that are not connected.
This document discusses the benefits and challenges of electronic health records (EHRs) and their role in public health informatics. It outlines how EHRs can improve patient care by providing more legible, shareable records compared to paper charts. EHRs also enable clinical decision support, alerts, and reminders to help practitioners. On a larger scale, EHR data in clinical data repositories and registries can help public health by tracking diseases, exposures, and procedures. However, EHR adoption faces challenges such as costs, technical issues, security concerns, and lack of standardized data exchange. Overall, the document argues that EHRs have the potential to dramatically change clinical practice and safeguard populations through improved teamwork and surveillance
Preparing For A New Era In Health Care Bakersdbuffalogirl
The document discusses the transition to electronic health records mandated by the HITECH Act and ARRA. It defines key terms like EHR, HIE, and meaningful use. It explains that reimbursement will depend on implementing a certified EHR system meeting meaningful use criteria like CPOE, clinical decision support, and information exchange. Point of care testing and laboratories must ensure test results are incorporated into the EHR in structured data. The transition requires reengineering health systems and establishing connectivity between facilities.
The document provides an overview and update on the Direct Project including:
- Background on what Direct is and why it is needed to provide secure electronic health information exchange.
- Examples of live Direct implementations across several states that are demonstrating use cases related to Meaningful Use criteria.
- Technology providers involved in the various pilot implementations, including health information service providers (HISPs) and electronic health record (EHR) vendors.
- Major findings from the pilot implementations including positive feedback on Direct's ability to facilitate health information exchange and support Meaningful Use goals.
Technology is transforming care, but most health information systems are a long way from becoming comprehensive and seamless. Visit http://kp.org/choosebetter to learn how a sophisticated, multifunctional system enables caregivers to improve outcomes, helps members take charge of their health, and gives businesses the data they need to manage their health care costs.
EHR software stores patients' personal and medical information digitally and restricts access to authorized personnel. It integrates data across departments. Popular types are EPRs used internally by hospitals and EMRs tracking a patient's recovery at a specific hospital unit.
Patient portals allow patients to access their medical records and check services available. They improve communication for chronically ill patients and encourage more complete records through patient feedback. However, concerns include potential hacking and difficulties encouraging patient adoption.
Telemedicine software enables online doctor consultations and prescription tools. It improves access to care, especially for remote patients, and is more convenient. However, insurance coverage can vary and technological issues may delay emergency care. E-prescrib
Learning Outcome Recommend data standard policies for interoper.docxssuser47f0be
Mary Watson is creating a strategic plan for a new integrated healthcare system with home care, skilled nursing, hospitals, and nursing homes. She needs to consider standards for sharing patient information between different parts of the system, some which have electronic records and some paper-based. The most important standards are content exchange standards to map data elements, vocabulary standards to ensure consistent terminology, transport standards for transferring paper and electronic records, and privacy/security standards to protect patient information. Barriers to interoperability include different record systems, but implementing content and vocabulary standards could help overcome this and allow efficient information sharing.
The document discusses computer-based patient records (CPRs). It defines CPRs and compares them to electronic medical records (EMRs). CPRs contain complete patient data across providers and are designed to support users. EMRs focus on a single provider and usually stay within a practice. The document also outlines characteristics of CPRs like accountability, flexibility, interoperability and comprehensiveness. Benefits include coordinated care, reduced errors and costs. Legal issues involve privacy and patients' rights to access their health records.
Telehealth and Medical Tourism platform that transforms healthcareArun Kumar
Health care sector is undergoing a critical transition from a delivery system aimed at providing occasional institutional care for the treatment of illnesses to an importance on information systems that support community-based care, with greater consumer involvement in the prevention and management of illness across the life span. Telemed is a Mobile Application Platform using advanced communications technologies to support long-distance Video Visits, Second opinions, Patient health education, Push Alerts, Health Analytics, Electronic health Records, and SOAP Notes
Similar to Simple Interop for Healthcare (Wes Rishel) (20)
The history of medicine has been a continuous evolution of methods, models, and paradigms as what's possible has changed with new technology. Today the frontier of medicine is "superpatients" - patients who don't just receive care, they literally extend science and create treatments: truly "super" patients. Video of this talk will be available soon!
As patient engagement (aka consumer engagement) earns attention, the question increasingly arises: “Where do we start? What can we do?” More specifically, “What do we mean when we say ‘patient engagement’?” The Patient Activation Measure is a powerful tool for understanding where someone's at and how to interact with them differently.
This document provides 10 reasons why patients should Google their medical conditions. It begins with a story about a man brought to the emergency room for ingesting an unknown substance. The doctors shut his laptop without determining what he ingested. The document then lists 10 reasons patients should Google: 1) Knowledge is power 2) People perform better when informed 3) No one knows everything 4) Medical advice changes over time 5) New information doesn't instantly reach all doctors 6) Online information can reach patients directly 7) Useful information exists outside medical journals 8) Some medical studies have flaws 9) Patients have a right to know their options 10) Patients have the most at stake in their own health.
High-powered webcast to NNLM Feb 21, 2019. Introduces the Superpatient concept, contrasts it with generic "citizen scientists," gives several examples, addresses the cultural obstacles that hold back progress, and asks how medical libraries might encourage and support superpatients in their efforts.
Opening keynote at DIA Europe, Vienna, Feb 5, 2019. Our paradigm of patient is significantly out of date, and it's holding back progress - a new class of "Superpatients" are *extending* science when the doctors are out of answers. Amazing!
Dave deBronkart came to focus on participatory healthcare after being diagnosed with stage IV kidney cancer in 2007. Through online research and connecting with other patients, he learned about an immunotherapy treatment that significantly extended his survival, whereas his doctors had given him only a few months to live. This experience led him to become an advocate for empowering patients through technology and social media. He argues that empowered, engaged patients who actively manage their own healthcare can help doctors spend more time with each patient and potentially achieve better health outcomes.
From “Let Patients Help” to “Get Out of My Way”: Why some patients want ALL ...e-Patient Dave deBronkart
High speed talk to developers at the annual FHIR* Developer Days conference in Amsterdam. The world of health data migration is advancing very rapidly, and the time has come to call for developers to let PATIENTS have full access to every kind of data they need.
* FHIR = Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources FHIR.HL7.org
This document profiles "e-Patient Dave" deBronkart and his journey from being diagnosed with cancer in 2007 to becoming a prominent advocate for participatory medicine and empowering patients. It describes his early career in marketing and technology, how he turned to blogging and researching his condition online after his cancer diagnosis, and how he has since become a full-time speaker and advisor on issues of patient engagement and empowerment, publishing over 1400 blog posts and articles on the topic. It stresses the importance of patients being able to access and share health information online to become better informed and engaged in their own care.
This document outlines the principles of participatory medicine as described by "e-Patient Dave" deBronkart. It discusses how access to information empowers patients and allows them to contribute to medical knowledge. When patients are informed and engaged in their care, they can perform better. The emergence of online communities and social media has created new opportunities for patients to connect with information and each other outside of traditional healthcare systems. True empowerment involves treating patients as partners in decisions about their own care.
National Cancer Patient Forum: "What might we be overlooking?" (A patient's p...e-Patient Dave deBronkart
The document discusses issues with the current healthcare system from the perspective of patients, including a risk of selection bias in only considering the views of certain patients and not hearing from those who have dropped out of the system. It advocates for asking patients directly if the system is working and ensuring information reaches those in need. The need to fix problems where information isn't reaching patients at the point of need is also discussed.
This document profiles Dave deBronkart, known as "e-Patient Dave", an advocate for empowering patients through access to health information and online communities. It discusses his background and work promoting participatory medicine. It outlines how patients can help healthcare achieve its potential by checking their medical records, asking clinicians to share screens, accessing open notes, reviewing hospital safety scores, accessing podcasts and case managers. The overall message is that when patients are informed and engaged, medicine can better achieve its goals.
This document profiles "e-Patient Dave" deBronkart, a patient engagement advocate. It summarizes his journey from a marketing career to becoming a full-time patient advocate after being diagnosed with cancer in 2007. It describes how he utilized online resources and patient communities to help make treatment decisions and find an effective immunotherapy. The document advocates for greater patient empowerment and participation in healthcare, citing examples of highly engaged "e-patients" who are helping to advance medicine through open data sharing and DIY medical innovations.
- Dave deBronkart is an "e-patient" advocate who became involved in participatory healthcare after being diagnosed with stage IV kidney cancer in 2007.
- Through online research and peer support groups, he learned about treatment options that saved his life, experiencing firsthand how engaged patients can access valuable information.
- He now works full-time advocating for patient empowerment and engagement, speaking internationally at over 500 events about how empowered, informed patients lead to better outcomes and more cost-effective care.
This document discusses the need for a patient perspective in healthcare. It notes that existing data may have selection bias by not accounting for people who have dropped out of the system or given up. It advocates for giving patients and caregivers more control over their care goals and outcomes. The document argues that patients should have veto-level approval power and be asked if new approaches to survivorship care are working. It also suggests healthcare can be improved by addressing issues like high costs and better informing patients.
This document profiles Dave deBronkart, known as "e-Patient Dave", an advocate for engaged patients and participatory healthcare. It summarizes his journey from being diagnosed with late-stage kidney cancer in 2007 to becoming a full-time patient engagement advocate by 2010. It highlights how he utilized online resources and connected with other patients to actively participate in his own care and treatment decisions, ultimately finding success through an unconventional therapy. The document advocates that patients can be an underused resource and that online connections allow information and support to exist outside traditional healthcare channels.
Companion video: http://www.epatientdave.com/2017/02/06/the-lost-keynote-video-aanp-2014/
The 2014 annual meeting of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners, in Nashville. One of my favorite talks of all time - nurse practitioners are by nature highly committed to putting power and competence in the hands of patients.
Connects to the social roots of the movement, particularly the women's movement, and emphasizes the patient's view: is it really a PROBLEM that we're surviving long enough to get chronic conditions?? Standing ovation.
Presentation by Šarūnas Narbutas, President of Lithuanian Cancer Patient Coalition (POLA), at a 2015 conference, regarding the many tricky issues around independence, funding, and trustworthiness of everyone in patient / industry partnerships.
This document discusses the transformation of healthcare through empowered patients or "e-patients" and outlines four laws of transformation and three diseases that patients face. It advocates that patients should be stakeholders in their own care and informed partners. It highlights examples of patients using technology like Fitbit and diabetes apps to better manage their conditions. The document warns of resistance to change from the medical system and advocates patients demanding access to their own health data to become better informed.
The congress theme is "How far is the future?" This 20 minute talk discusses the sociological and technological changes that are enabling Participatory Medicine, and what it means for the future of providers' practices.
Promoting Wellbeing - Applied Social Psychology - Psychology SuperNotesPsychoTech Services
A proprietary approach developed by bringing together the best of learning theories from Psychology, design principles from the world of visualization, and pedagogical methods from over a decade of training experience, that enables you to: Learn better, faster!
Does Over-Masturbation Contribute to Chronic Prostatitis.pptxwalterHu5
In some case, your chronic prostatitis may be related to over-masturbation. Generally, natural medicine Diuretic and Anti-inflammatory Pill can help mee get a cure.
Osteoporosis - Definition , Evaluation and Management .pdfJim Jacob Roy
Osteoporosis is an increasing cause of morbidity among the elderly.
In this document , a brief outline of osteoporosis is given , including the risk factors of osteoporosis fractures , the indications for testing bone mineral density and the management of osteoporosis
Muktapishti is a traditional Ayurvedic preparation made from Shoditha Mukta (Purified Pearl), is believed to help regulate thyroid function and reduce symptoms of hyperthyroidism due to its cooling and balancing properties. Clinical evidence on its efficacy remains limited, necessitating further research to validate its therapeutic benefits.
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One health condition that is becoming more common day by day is diabetes.
According to research conducted by the National Family Health Survey of India, diabetic cases show a projection which might increase to 10.4% by 2030.
1. Simple Interop for Healthcare in the US 25 January 2009 This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 171 Second Street, Suite 300, San Francisco, California, 94105, USA. If this work is shared or adapted the original work should be attributed to Wes Rishel of McKinleyville, CA and include a citation to http://blogs.gartner.com/wes_rishel
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8. The Goal (A Challenge): Start by Doing Slightly Better Than the Fax Machine
45. Revision History 21 Jan 10 original 23 Jan 10 typos 24 Jan 10 added use cases 25 Jan 10 Removed disease registry discussion to avoid complications about discussing consent for aggregation (other than the PHR). Miscellaneous changes based on comments.
An Older Person’s Joke There are these two young fish swimming along and they happen to meet an older fish swimming the other way, who nods at them and says “Morning, boys. How’s the water?” And the two young fish swim on for a bit, and then eventually one of them looks over at the other and goes “What the hell is water?” (From David Foster Wallace, novelist, speaking at Kenyon College, 2005.)