电子健康记录和健康信息交换

L. Ohno-Machado
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引用次数: 2

摘要

HITECH“有意义的使用”(MU)法规大大加快了电子健康记录(EHRs)在美国的采用,该法规要求所有医疗机构要么实施这些系统,要么支付罚款。因此,在过去的十年中,JAMIA收到了更多的手稿,重点是在各种临床环境中选择、定制、实施和评估电子病历的使用,以及在医疗机构之间交换电子病历中包含的信息。本期《JAMIA》重点介绍了使用和评估电子病历和健康信息交换(HIE)的最新经验。了解在哪里可以改进电子病历是继续采用电子病历的一个重要因素。Goss(第661页)提出了不良反应记录的一个值集,Kannampallil(第739页)描述了给错误的病人开出药物处方与临床医生监视器中打开的图表数量之间的关系。Wright(第709页)解释了自由文本电子处方如何导致沟通失败,Percha(第679页)建议使用放射学报告中包含的上下文模式扩展放射学词典。在生物医学信息学文献中,定制EHR系统以适应不同环境下临床工作流程的重要性已被广泛记录。Veinot(第746页)描述了一个在初级保健中模拟临床信息交互的过程,Ramelson(第715页)报告了一个增强的转诊管理系统。Krousel-Wood(第618页)比较了医疗保健提供者对从小型电子病历系统过渡到综合商业系统的看法。Price-Haywood(第702页)分析了通过安全门户信息在患者和护理团队之间进行沟通的剂量效应,Reading(第759页)报告了使用患者生成的健康数据的患者和提供者之间的相同和不同需求。除了帮助临床医生记录他们的活动和使用信息提供护理之外,电子健康档案系统在医疗保健质量、管理和生物医学研究方面也发挥着重要作用。Cho(第730页)报告了如何从EHR系统自动填充特定的测量。Holman (p. 694)描述了MU如何为家庭医生带来利益和负担,Holmgren (p. 654)评估了特定电子病历系统与MU绩效之间的关系。此外,Casucci (p. 670)使用医疗补助数据来研究慢性疾病组合对30天住院再入院的影响,这是一项重要的医疗质量指标。Fraser(第627页)讨论了电子药物警戒系统成功的障碍,Baron(第645页)提出了一种在纵向临床数据中输入多分析物值以用于机器学习系统的方法。在医疗保健数据集成成为常态的时代,许多HIE方法正在跨县、州和国家推行。Motulsky(第722页)分析了加拿大魁北克省HIE药物数据的使用和准确性,Schmit(第635页)描述了各州法律的差异如何对这种类型的交换产生不利影响或促进这种交换,Klapman(第686页)报告了五个国家紧急护理临床医生对HIE的经验。正如JAMIA问题所表明的那样,我们生活在电子病历系统和HIE发展的激动人心的时代。从如此多的不同角度理解了它们的使用和有用性的多个方面,采用率从未如此之高。
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Electronic health records and health information exchange
The adoption of electronic health records (EHRs) in the U.S. was greatly accelerated by the HITECH “meaningful use” (MU) regulations, which require that all healthcare institutions either implement these systems or pay penalties. Accordingly, in the past decade, JAMIA has received many more manuscripts focused on the experiences from selecting, customizing, implementing, and evaluating the use of EHRs in various clinical settings, and on exchanging information contained in the EHRs across healthcare institutions. This issue of JAMIA focuses on the latest experiences of using and evaluating EHRs and a health information exchange (HIE). Understanding where EHRs can be improved is an important factor in their continued adoption. Goss (p. 661) proposes a value set for adverse reaction documentation, and Kannampallil (p. 739) describes the association between issuing medication orders for the wrong patient and the number of open charts in a clinician’s monitor. Wright (p. 709) explains how free-text electronic prescriptions can result in communication failure, and Percha (p. 679) proposes an expansion of the radiology lexicon using contextual patterns contained in radiology reports. The importance of customizing EHR systems to clinical workflows in different settings has been extensively documented in the biomedical informatics literature. Veinot (p. 746) describes a process to model clinical information interactions in primary care, and Ramelson (p. 715) reports on an enhanced referral management system. Krousel-Wood (p. 618) compares healthcare provider perceptions on transitioning from a small EHR system into a comprehensive commercial system. Price-Haywood (p. 702) analyzes dose effects of communication between patients and the care team via secure portal messaging, and Reading (p. 759) reports on the converging and diverging needs among patients and providers who are using patient-generated health data. In addition to their role of assisting clinicians in documenting their activities and using the information to provide care, EHR systems have an important role for healthcare quality, management, and biomedical research. Cho (p. 730) reports on how specific eMeasurements can be automatically populated from EHR systems. Holman (p. 694) describes how MU can result in both benefits and burdens for family physicians, Holmgren (p. 654) assesses the relationship between specific EHR systems and MU performance. Additionally, Casucci (p. 670) uses Medicaid data to study effects of chronic disease combinations on 30-day hospital readmissions, an important healthcare quality measure. Fraser (p. 627) discusses barriers to the success of an electronic pharmacovigilance system, and Baron (p. 645) proposes an approach for imputing multi-analyte values in longitudinal clinical data for use in machine learning systems. In an era where healthcare data integration becomes the norm, several HIE approaches are being pursued across counties, states, and nations. Motulsky (p. 722) analyzes usage and accuracy of medication data from HIE in Quebec, Canada, Schmit (p. 635) describes how differences in state laws can adversely impact or facilitate this type of exchange, and Klapman (p. 686) reports on emergency care clinicians’ experiences of HIE across five countries. As this JAMIA issue illustrates, we live in an exciting time in the evolution of EHR systems and HIE. Never before has adoption been so high with an understanding of the multiple aspects of their use and usefulness approached from so many different perspectives.
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