Title: Chapter 17 Clinical Information Systems
1Chapter 17Clinical Information Systems
- Yung-Fu Chen, Ph.D.
- Department of Health Services Administration,
China Medical University
Reference M. Conrick, Health Informatics with
Technology, Thomson Press, South Melborne,
Australia, 2006.
2Outline
- There is a plethora of challenges in dealing with
clinical data, but once they are captured and
identified they need to be stored in such a way
as to allow efficient retrieval and their secure
transmission to the appropriate clinician. This
chapter discusses the development and
implementation of clinical information system
(CIS).
3Paper-based Clinical Records
- The paper-based records can only be read by only
one person at a time they must have physical
possession of the document - Security is a problem with almost clinician able
to access it regardless of their need to know
status. Additionally, there is no method of
tracking access - Patient is frustrating to be continually
repeating the same information to a number of
different clinicians all asking the same or
similar questions - Since the communication has been so slow, it has
often been the case that information is not in
the right place at the right time
4Purpose of CIS
- To make information and knowledge available to
healthcare providers during care delivery - Purport to streamline clinical workflows and
eliminate repetitive tasks that reduce
productivity and lead to errors - To achieve efficiency, healthcare facilities must
integrate health data from a number of different
sources
5Clinical Systems Architecture
- Using LAN, stand-alone desktop PC were linked
creating a distributed computing environment.
Sometimes information was only available to
members of a particular department - To overcome the above problem, client-server
computing was developed that information can be
shared between multiple smaller computers or
clients that are all connected via a network to a
powerful host computer, the server
- The most widely used form of client/server
architecture is known as three-tiered
architecture. It allows patient data to be stored
across departments and facilities in database
servers that can be integrated in a
patient-centric format by the application server - In many cases, this architecture uses thin client
software, usually a browser, shift the data
processing functions onto the server
6Figure 17.1 A mock-up of what a typical dumb
terminal character-based screen might look like
7Figure 17.2 A typical three-tier client/server
architecture. Most CIS now utilize this
architecture
8What are point-of-care clinical systems? (1)
- Simply CIS located adjacent to where care takes
place, in most circumstances at the bedside - Support clinical care by allowing easy input and
retrieval of information. - Examples Order entry, results reporting,
clinical documentation, electronic decision
support, medication management, online evidence
retrieval, and telehealth systems - The most common POC clinical systems include
electronic prescribing, electronic order entry,
and results viewing systems. These systems are
referred to as e-ordering system, physician order
entry (POE) or computerized physician order entry
(CPOE),
9What are point-of-care clinical systems? (2)
- A major benefit of these e-ordering systems is
their ability to augment clinical judgment via
integrated clinical decision support system (DCS)
- The goals of any point-of-care system should be
to - reduce the amount of time spent documenting
patient care - Eliminate inaccuracies and data redundancy
- Enhance the timeliness of data communication
- Provide optimal access to information
- Improve the quality of care by providing
clinicians with the best possible information on
which to base clinician decisions
10Wireless Clinical Systems
- Most hospital clinicians are highly mobil and,
consequently, software applications must allow
them to quickly review and interact with patient
information while they are on the move - The development of wireless LANs over recent
years has facilitated the move to mobile clinical
computing solution - The use of wireless technology has become
widespread in healthcare settings
11Components of a CIS
- Clinical documentation systems
- Order entry
- Medication management
- Other systems
- Pharmacy
- Pathology
- Radiology
- Physiological monitoring systems
- Subsidiary systems
12Figure 17.3 A browser-based order entry system
13Figure 17.4 Once downloaded from the pathology
system, results are able to be cumulated and
graphed
14Figure 17.5 physiologic data presented in
Cerners PowerChart
15Chapter 5 Current and Emerging Use of Clinical
Information Systems
- Yung-Fu Chen, Ph.D.
- Department of Health Services Management, China
Medical University
Reference Wager, Lee, Glaser, 2005
16Current and Emerging Use of Clinical Information
Systems
- Electronic medical record (EMR)
- Other Major Types of Health Care IS
- Computerized provider order entry (CPOE)
- Medication administration
- Telemedicine
- Telehealth
- Fitting Applications Together The EMR is the Hub
- Barrier to Adoption
17 Electronic medical record (EMR)
- Five levels of computerization
- Automated medical record
- Although health-care organization may automate
certain functions such as patient registration,
scheduling, results reporting, and dictation,
however, the paper-based medical record remains
the primary source for patients clinical
information - Computerized medical record
- Digitizing the patients medical record through
the use of a document imaging system - Patients records are scanned and stored as
images - Does not allow the user to analyze or aggregate
data for decision-making - Is merely a digitized version of paper-based
medical record
18Electronic medical record (EMR)
- Five levels of computerization
- Automated medical record
- Computerized medical record
- Electronic medical record
- Patient record as an active tool that can provide
the clinician with decision support capabilities
and access to knowledge resources, reminders, and
alerts - The EMR may trigger alert or notice to medication
allergy, medication interaction, and
examinations and tests - Maintained by a single organization
- Electronic patient record
- Includes all healthcare-related information
concerning the patient-gathered across two or
more organization - Brings together a central database all clinical
information available on a patient - Electronic patient record
19Electronic medical record (EMR)
- Five levels of computerization
- Automated medical record
- Computerized medical record
- Electronic medical record
- Electronic patient record
- Electronic patient record
- Is broader than the electronic patient record
- Includes wellness information (smoking habit,
nutrition, level of exercise, dental health,
alcohol use) and other information not maintained
by health care organization - Patient is at the center
- Is a longitudinal record and ultimately encompass
a persons relevant health information from
before birth to death
20Five Levels of Computerization of EMR
Level 5 Electronic Health Record (longitudinal,
comprehensive)
Level 4 Electronic Patient Record (spans across
organization)
Level 3 Electronic Medical Record (active tool,
organization level)
Level 2 Computerized Medical Record (document
imaging)
Level 1 Automated Medical Record (clinical info
systems)
21 Computerized provider order entry (CPOE)
- To keep patients safe is one of the biggest
concerns of health care organizations - 98000 patients die each year in U.S. hospitals
due to medical error (IOM, 2000, 2001) - CPOE has the potential to reduce medication error
adverse drug events (Bates Gawande 2003) - CPOE is one of three changes that would most
improve patient safety (Leapfrog Group 2004a) - CPOE is a computer application that accepts
physician orders electronically, replacing
handwritten or verbal orders and prescriptions
- Current use of CPOE
- Approximately 5-13 of hospitals (Leapfrog group
2002, First Consulting Group 2003, Brailer
Terasawa 2003) - Value of CPOE
- CPOE system can provide patient care, financial,
and organizational benefits - Potential to improve patient safety and reduce
medication error - Beneficial in ambulatory care setting (Johnston
et al. 2003, 2004) - The providers and patients are highly satisfied
with their access to health care information ,
their wait times, and the quality of care
delivered (Johnston et al. 2003)
22 Medication administration
- Barcode-enabled point of care (BPOC) has the
potential to enhance productivity, improve
patient safety such as those related to correctly
identifying patients and medications, and
ultimately improve quality of care (Low Belcher
2002) - Each patient receives a barcode wristband at the
time of permission for identification - The provider scan his or her bar-coded ID band to
log into the medical administration system - Provide an audit trail of who has accessed what
systems at what time and for what information - About half of medication errors occur during the
ordering process, but errors also occur in
dispensing, administrating, and monitoring
medications (Kaushal Bates 2002) - BPOC can be highly effectively in reducing all
types of medication errors, yet only 1.1 of
U.S. hospitals have bed-side scanners (Barlas
2002) - Only 35 of medications come from the
manufacturer with bar-coded labels in 2003 ??? - RFID is replacing barcode in medication
administration
23Telemedicine
- Use of telecommunication for the clinical care
(diagnosing, treating, or following up) of
patients at distant locations - Current status of telemedicine programs
- 200 programs throughout the U.S. in 2004 (Brown)
- Univ. of Kansas provided clinical services to
oncology patients and mental health services to
patients in rural area and augmented school
health services by giving school nurses to
consult with physicians - Univ. of Texas Medical Branch Provided services
to inmates (400 patients a month)
- Primary delivery method
- Store and forward
- Is used to primarily for transferring digital
images from one location to another by taking an
image with a digital camera and stored on a
server, and then sent to a health care provider - Two-way interactive television
- Is used when a face-to-face consultation is
necessary by giving patients living in rural
communities access to providers in urban areas
without traveling - A number of devices can be linked to computers to
aid in interactive examination - Robotic equipment for telesurgery applications in
battle fields
24Telehealth (1)
- Patients have increasingly turned to the Internet
to obtain health care information and seek health
care services, and are interested in
communicating with their physicians directly on
the line - On-line communication from a patient may be
everything from requesting an appointment to
viewing a bill to refilling on prescriptions to
seeking advice or a consultant via e-mail
- Current use of E-mail communication between
physicians and patients - Currently 25 physicians use Email to communicate
with patients 90 of American adults would like
to communicate with their physicians via Email - Follow-up patient care, clarification on advice,
prescription refills, and patient education
25Telehealth (2)
- Value of E-mail communication system
- Is asynchronous
- Decrease telephone hold time
- Is legible
- Can automatically document a conversation
- Does not increase physicians workload or
decrease their productivity - Reduces patient visits and telephone calls
- Reduces administrative tasks
- Allows more uninterrupted time for patients
during office visits
- Critical considerations should be addressed when
instituting an e-mail communication system
between patients providers - Complexity of infrastructure
- Degree of integration
- Message structure
- Cost
- Security
- reimbursement
26Fitting Applications Together The EMR is the Hub
- The data that eventually make up each patients
record originate from a variety of sources - Admission or registration systems
- Patient demographic information, health insurance
or payer, providers name, date and reason for
visit or encounter, and so forth - Accounting systems
- Patient billing information
- Ancillary clinical (laboratory, radiology)
systems - Diagnostic tests, therapeutic procedures,
results, and so on - CPOE systems
- Physician orders, date, time and status, and so
forth
- Medication administrative systems
- Medications ordered, dispensed, and
administrated, and so forth - Other clinical and administrative systems
- Nursing, physical therapy, and nutrition
education documentation scheduling information
and so forth - Knowledge-based reference systems
- Access to MEDLINE, the latest research findings,
practice guidelines, and so forth - Telemedicine and telehealth systems
- Documentation of provision of health care
services, on-line communication with patients and
providers, and so forth
27EMR The Hub of Clinical Information Systems
Admission/ Administration
Other Clinical/AdministrativeSystem
Accounting
- ElectronicMedical Record
- Patient Identification
- Authentication
Pharmacy-Medication Distribution
LaboratoryResults
Interface
CPOE
Radiology
DecisionSupport
KnowledgeBase/Reference
TelemedicineTelehealth (for example,e-mail)
28Barrier to Adoption (1)
- Financial barriers
- EMR and related systems can be expensive to
develop, implement, and support - A significant amount of money invested and yet
not realize a positive financial return even a
return in term of quality - Behavior barriers
- Physician acceptance to change in workflow to
differences in state licensing regulations - EMR requires that physicians respond to
reminders, alerts, and other knowledge aids which
lead to better patient care but may also require
more time - Most physicians receive no reimbursement or
compensation for using EMR systems or for
providing good-quality care - Regarding telemedicine and telehealth
- Lack of hand-on interaction with patients
- Fear of litigation or missing important
information
29Barrier to Adoption (2)
- Technical barriers standard and data definition
- Understanding how emerging technologies fit with
existing technologies, and engaging in continuing
development and refinement of standards and data
definitions - Following health care information standards is
not an easy task - Inadequate standards combined with rapid changing
technologies can be a barrier to widespread EMR
adoption and use - Must have stable infrastructure to support
clinical and administrative applications