Werner CEUSTERS1,2,3 and Jonathan BLAISURE1,3

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Presentation transcript:

Werner CEUSTERS1,2,3 and Jonathan BLAISURE1,3 EFMI Special Topic Conference 2018 Decision Support Systems and Education – Help and Support in Healthcare October 14-16, 2018, Zagreb, Croatia. Caveats for the use of the active problem list as ground truth for decision support. Werner CEUSTERS1,2,3 and Jonathan BLAISURE1,3 1 Department of Biomedical Informatics, University at Buffalo, USA 2 Department of Psychiatry, University at Buffalo, USA 3 Institute for Healthcare Informatics, University at Buffalo, USA

Data aggregation and use Operational systems IHI Clinical Integrated Data Repository Secondary use Cohort selection EHR Data Marts EHR EHR EHR Cost effectiveness research Bio Bank Decision support Health Insurers Health Insurers Quality assurance Health Insurers

W. R Hersh, M. G. Weiner, P. J. Embi, J. R. Logan, P. R. Payne, E. V W.R Hersh, M.G. Weiner, P.J. Embi, J.R. Logan, P.R. Payne, E.V. Bernstam, H.P. Lehmann, G. Hripcsak, T.H. Hartzog, J.J. Cimino, J.H. Saltz. Caveats for the use of operational electronic health record data in comparative effectiveness research, Medical care 51 (2013), 30-37.

Data aggregation and use Operational systems IHI Clinical Integrated Data Repository Secondary use Cohort selection EHR Data Marts EHR EHR EHR Cost effectiveness research Common Data Models Bio Bank Decision support Health Insurers Health Insurers Quality assurance Health Insurers

Common Data Models for Secondary Use The Observational Medical Outcomes Partnership (OMOP) Health Care Systems Research Network (HCSRN) The National Patient-Centered Clinical Research Network (PCORNet)

CDMs introduce mistakes Blaisure J, Ceusters W. Business Rules to Improve Secondary Data Use of Electronic Healthcare Systems. Informatics for Health 2017, Manchester Central, UK, April 24-26, 2017. Stud Health Technol Inform. 2017;235:303-307. Ceusters W, Blaisure J. A Realism-Based View on Counts in OMOP’s Common Data Model. 14th International Conference on Wearable, micro & Nano Technologies (pHealth 2017), Eindhoven, The Netherlands, May 14-16, 2017. Studies in Health Technology and Informatics 2017;237:55-62. Blaisure J, Ceusters W. Improving the Fitness for Purpose of Common Data Models through Realism Based Ontology. AMIA 2017 Annual Symposium, Washington DC, Nov 04-08, 2017. AMIA Annu Symp Proc. 2017; 2017: 440–447.

Data aggregation and use Operational systems IHI Clinical Integrated Data Repository Secondary use Cohort selection EHR Data Marts EHR EHR EHR Cost effectiveness research Common Data Models Bio Bank Decision support Realist Ontology (RO) & Referent Tracking (RT)- based Data Repository Health Insurers Health Insurers Quality assurance Health Insurers

RO and RT make 4 crucial distinctions 1 Reality  representation

RO and RT make 4 crucial distinctions Ontology  an ontology 2

RO and RT make 4 crucial distinctions 3

RO and RT make 4 crucial distinctions

Research question Can these principles be applied to assess the extent to which the transactions registered in the EHR’s database resulting from managing the problem list provide insight in: the adequacy of the clinical user interface to capture what the clinician had in mind, with the goal to reconstruct the clinical reality of the patient?

https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Legislation/EHRIncentivePrograms/downloads/3_Maintain_Problem_ListEP.pdf

L. Weed. Medical records that guide and teach L. Weed. Medical records that guide and teach. New England Journal of Medicine 278 (1968), 593-600.

Transitioning a problem

Problems Encounters Episodes Salmon P, Rappaport A, Bainbridge M, Hayes G, Williams J. Taking the problem oriented medical record forward. Proc AMIA Annu Fall Symp. 1996:463-7.

Methodology Problem Type Problem Status Problem Category Problem Header Change Record Problem Header Problem Instance Encounter ~6,000,000 ~6,000,000 Transition Patient ~500,000

Results Problem Type Problem Status Problem Category Problem Header Change Record Problem Header Problem Instance Encounter ~370,000 ~6,000,000 ~765,000 Transition Patient ~23,000 ~500,000 ~80,000 ~395,000 rec. / ~664,000 ch.

Change count distributions Changes Frequency Cumulative % 1 349,361 94.52% 2 16,325 98.94% 3 3,426 99.86% 4 312 99.95% 5 147 99.99% 6 14 7 to 34 26 100.00% Transitions Frequency % 1 21819 94.202% 2 1154 4.982% 3 150 0.648% 4 34 0.147% 5 0.017% 6 0.004%

Problem status changes

Active / Resolved   EHR update event  PtID PrID Problem 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 B1 Cerumen Impaction In Both Ears N D R A Impacted cerumen of right ear B2 Cerumen Impaction C1 Acute Sinusitis C2 Legend: ‘PtID’: patient identifier; ‘PrID’: problem header identifier; ‘N’: Problem header added and marked active; ‘D’: problem documentation added; ‘A’: problem header marked active; ‘R’: problem resolved; Arrow: problem ‘transitioned’ into the problem pointed at by the arrow. Solid background: problem ‘active’.

Transitions in two diabetes patients

Note: 1A and 1B any time: 650 patients

Future work: towards an OGMS-based Referent Tracking Interpretation

Conclusions Poor reality / representation correspondence: Impossible co-morbidity assertions; Resolved disorders appear again: ‘problem’ as type rather than particular, or, ‘problem’ as assertion rather than first-order entity; Use of ‘inactive’ poorly related to presence or absence of disease entity. User-interface itself is conducive to reality and representation confusion. Secondary use for knowledge acquisition and decision report requires much caution.