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Medical Devices and Clinical Informatics

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1 Medical Devices and Clinical Informatics
James E. Tcheng, MD, FACC, FSCAI Professor of Medicine Professor of Informatics Duke University Health System I have no relevant RWI to report

2 Disclosure Statement of Financial Interest
I, James Tcheng, DO NOT have a financial interest/arrangement or affiliation with one or more organizations that could be perceived as a real or apparent conflict of interest in the context of the subject of this presentation.

3 If you don’t know where you are going,
chances are you will end up somewhere else. -- Yogi Berra ( )

4 Medical Devices and Informatics
Aka “Where Do We Need To Go?” First Principles Unique Device Identification and GUDID data Creating the “river of data”

5 The Clinical Informatics Model
Clinical lexicon as the foundation of controlled vocabularies  rich clinical data + transactions A Common Data Model (and referential integrity) High quality data enables data exchange – “collect once, use many times” Documentation  team-based data capture at the point of care, via structured / semi-structured reporting Data privacy and security In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. Multiple attributions

6 Why a “Controlled Vocabulary”?
Unified clinical lexicons applicable across all clinical documentation, from POC to registries to analytics Key role of professional societies

7 Referential Integrity
… is a property of data which, when satisfied, requires every value of one attribute (column) of a relation (table) to exist as a value of another attribute (column) in a different relation (table) Wikipedia This underscores the concept of the single source(s) of truth – and is a requirement of data models  data (or analysis) aggregation

8 Implantable Devices: UDI adoption in EHI
UDI = DI (Device Identifier) + PI (Production Identifiers) Where do implantable devices appear in EHI? Supply chain Clinical care: procedure / OR documentation, EHR Medical device interrogation, output Billing and claims data Registries How to capture in all EHI? What does the UDI enable?

9 Learning UDI Community - Data Quality Focus Clinically Relevant Size
GUDID Repository for device identifier linked to device attributes – single source of truth for all EHI? Learning UDI Community - Data Quality Focus Clinically Relevant Size GUDID field Mfg 1 Mfg 2 Mfg3 SizeType Text Length null SizeUnit [blank] mm null SizeValue [blank] 18.0 null SizeText 18mm length [blank] null

10 Clinician Documentation 2017
Dictation recorder Pen

11 Clinician Documentation 2017
Mired in ancient paradigms Authoring of descriptive play-by-play novella encouraged (starts in med school) Demonstration of physician prowess, justification of actions (Misbelief) that it will be a good defense in case of malpractice 75% is garbage E&M coding requirements, EHR MU Team-based documentation actively discouraged By regulation, job description, EHR systems

12 What Has To Change? Document paradigm of the 20th century  informatics data model of the 21st century Transformation to structured and semi-structured reporting Understanding the destination: not just “Big Data”, it is “Deep Learning”

13 What is Structured Reporting?
Team-based documentation: specific data captured by the person closest to that data in the clinical workflow (e.g. MA, tech, RN) Use of universal, well-defined common data elements Data model parallels clinical care model Data is compiled to produce vast majority of report MD: focuses on data quality, cognitive interpretation Output: the structured report ROI:  data quality /quantity,  redundancy / repetition, time to final reports, FTE requirements  augmented knowledge, financial gains

14 What is Deep Learning? … a branch of machine learning based on sets of algorithms that attempt to model high level abstractions in data You are following a patient with aortic stenosis. When should she undergo aortic valve replacement? When the risk of procedural morbidity and mortality will be the lowest, before the onset of end-organ consequences, and that will produce the best outcomes!

15 Where Are We Going? Informatics: common data elements (CDE)  controlled vocabulary; common data model (CDM); data interchange (CDA, IHE) -- from clinical use to CVIS to EHR to registry Clinical industrial (process) engineering to describe, model, implement best-practice workflows -- who does what when, where, and how New MD, staff professionalism standards -- conversion from dictation to information model -- implementation science, change management Partnership with IT vendors -- informatics and structured reporting

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