临床编码与健康数据的质量和完整性

IF 2.7 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES Health Information Management Journal Pub Date : 2020-01-01 DOI:10.1177/1833358319874008
Jennie Shepheard
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Clinical coded data influences diverse aspects of our health systems, from quality and safety monitoring and funding models to health service planning and infrastructure development. In addition, we have technological developments that will change the clinical coders’ roles substantially over the next 5–10 years. The articles published in this Special Issue reflect these challenges and illustrate the far-reaching consequences of data that lack integrity and are of poor quality. Campbell and Giadresco (2020), through a literature review, investigated the effect of computer assisted coding on the accuracy and quality of clinical coding and its impact on clinical coding professionals. The articles, dissertations and case studies they reviewed demonstrated value in improving clinical coding accuracy and quality through computer assisted coding. Campbell and Giadresco concluded that clinical coders should view computer assisted coding as an opportunity to develop new skills, particularly in monitoring and auditing coding outputs, and that sound change management strategies are needed to ensure a successful transition of the clinical coding workforce to new roles. Improved clinical coding accuracy will benefit our health system enormously but it would be naı̈ve to think that computer assisted coding is the complete answer. Clinical coders will be needed in different roles to help realise the benefits of computer assisted coding. To that end, Hay et al. (2020) discussed the role of documentation improvement specialists and how they can ensure adequate documentation that can be translated into clinical codes. This is a potential role for clinical coders who understand both the clinical documentation and the needs of the end users of the coded data. Hay et al. (2020) also outlined the work of the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care, which has promoted improved documentation through its National Safety and Quality Health Service Standards and the use of coded data for monitoring patient safety through its hospital-based outcome indicators. The development of the hospital-based outcome indicators has further elevated the need for high-quality clinical coding. However, barriers exist to achieving quality clinical coding outcomes. Canadian authors, Doktorchik et al. (2020), discussed these barriers in their article ‘A Qualitative Evaluation of Clinically Coded Data Quality From Health Information Manager Perspectives’. Their interviews with health information managers and clinical coding managers revealed that expectations were increasing for high-quality data collection but without additional resources to support this endeavour. They also found that incomplete and disorganised clinical documentation and lack of good communication with clinicians impacted on the quality of clinical coding. These same issues exist in Australia, and I am sure in many other countries around the world. The integrity of clinical coding depends fundamentally on the quality of the patient record. The Portuguese study by Alonso et al. (2020), ‘Health records as the basis of clinical coding: Is the quality adequate? A qualitative study of medical coders’ perceptions’, highlights that clinical records are not just for patient treatment but that the data derived from them are stored in administrative databases and used for many downstream purposes. To that end, the authors conducted focus groups to elicit from clinical coders the problems they face in the health records that influence the quality of the coded data. 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The development of the hospital-based outcome indicators has further elevated the need for high-quality clinical coding. However, barriers exist to achieving quality clinical coding outcomes. Canadian authors, Doktorchik et al. (2020), discussed these barriers in their article ‘A Qualitative Evaluation of Clinically Coded Data Quality From Health Information Manager Perspectives’. Their interviews with health information managers and clinical coding managers revealed that expectations were increasing for high-quality data collection but without additional resources to support this endeavour. They also found that incomplete and disorganised clinical documentation and lack of good communication with clinicians impacted on the quality of clinical coding. These same issues exist in Australia, and I am sure in many other countries around the world. The integrity of clinical coding depends fundamentally on the quality of the patient record. The Portuguese study by Alonso et al. 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引用次数: 9

摘要

很高兴为本期《健康信息管理杂志》(HIMJ)提供客座编辑。《华尔街日报》有着悠久而有趣的历史,可以追溯到20世纪70年代,最初是由志愿者用模版和复印机手工制作的(Watson,2019)。事实上,我们现在通过SAGE出版公司出版了一期特刊,这充分说明了《华尔街日报》已经走了多远,这期特刊的标题《临床编码与健康数据的质量和完整性》充分说明了临床编码对澳大利亚和世界各地健康信息管理的重要性。在澳大利亚,随着澳大利亚健康信息管理协会庆祝成立70周年,临床编码人员在许多方面面临挑战。临床编码数据影响着我们卫生系统的各个方面,从质量和安全监测和资金模式到卫生服务规划和基础设施发展。此外,我们的技术发展将在未来5-10年内大幅改变临床编码员的角色。本期特刊上发表的文章反映了这些挑战,并说明了缺乏完整性和质量差的数据的深远影响。Campbell和Giadresco(2020)通过文献综述,研究了计算机辅助编码对临床编码准确性和质量的影响及其对临床编码专业人员的影响。他们综述的文章、论文和案例研究证明了通过计算机辅助编码提高临床编码准确性和质量的价值。Campbell和Giadresco得出结论,临床编码人员应将计算机辅助编码视为发展新技能的机会,特别是在监测和审计编码输出方面,需要健全的变革管理策略,以确保临床编码人员成功过渡到新的角色。提高临床编码的准确性将使我们的卫生系统受益匪浅,但如果认为计算机辅助编码是完整的答案,那就太天真了。临床编码人员将需要扮演不同的角色,以帮助实现计算机辅助编码的好处。为此,Hay等人(2020)讨论了文档改进专家的作用,以及他们如何确保足够的文档可以转化为临床代码。对于既了解临床文档又了解编码数据最终用户需求的临床编码人员来说,这是一个潜在的角色。Hay等人(2020)还概述了澳大利亚卫生保健安全与质量委员会的工作,该委员会通过其《国家安全与质量卫生服务标准》促进了文件的改进,并通过其基于医院的结果指标使用编码数据监测患者安全。基于医院的结果指标的发展进一步提高了对高质量临床编码的需求。然而,实现高质量临床编码结果存在障碍。加拿大作者Doktorchik等人(2020)在他们的文章《从健康信息管理者的角度对临床编码数据质量进行定性评估》中讨论了这些障碍。他们对健康信息管理人员和临床编码管理人员的采访显示,人们对高质量数据收集的期望越来越高,但没有额外的资源来支持这项工作。他们还发现,不完整、组织混乱的临床文档以及缺乏与临床医生的良好沟通会影响临床编码的质量。同样的问题在澳大利亚也存在,我相信在世界上许多其他国家也是如此。临床编码的完整性从根本上取决于患者记录的质量。Alonso等人的葡萄牙研究(2020),“健康记录作为临床编码的基础:质量足够吗?”?一项对医疗编码人员“感知”的定性研究强调,临床记录不仅用于患者治疗,而且从中获得的数据存储在管理数据库中,并用于许多下游目的。为此,作者组织了焦点小组,从临床编码人员那里了解他们在健康记录中面临的影响编码数据质量的问题。他们发现了一些问题,包括遗漏或不完整的出院和/或手术记录、缩写的使用、不同专业之间文件的可变性以及诊断描述缺乏特异性。他们还发现,尽管电子健康记录解决了难以辨认的问题,但他们也产生了自己的问题,尤其是复制和粘贴设施,导致整个记录中重复出现错误,并需要大量笔记
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Clinical coding and the quality and integrity of health data
It is a pleasure to provide the guest editorial for this Special Issue of the Health Information Management Journal (HIMJ). The Journal has had a long and interesting history that can be traced back to the 1970s with humble beginnings, being manually produced with a stencil and duplicating machine by volunteers (Watson, 2019). The fact that we are now publishing a special issue through SAGE Publishing speaks volumes about how far the Journal has come and the title of this Special Issue, Clinical Coding and the Quality and Integrity of Health Data, speaks volumes about how important clinical coding has become to the management of health information in Australia and around the world. In Australia, as the Health Information Management Association of Australia celebrates its 70th anniversary, clinical coders are facing challenges on many fronts. Clinical coded data influences diverse aspects of our health systems, from quality and safety monitoring and funding models to health service planning and infrastructure development. In addition, we have technological developments that will change the clinical coders’ roles substantially over the next 5–10 years. The articles published in this Special Issue reflect these challenges and illustrate the far-reaching consequences of data that lack integrity and are of poor quality. Campbell and Giadresco (2020), through a literature review, investigated the effect of computer assisted coding on the accuracy and quality of clinical coding and its impact on clinical coding professionals. The articles, dissertations and case studies they reviewed demonstrated value in improving clinical coding accuracy and quality through computer assisted coding. Campbell and Giadresco concluded that clinical coders should view computer assisted coding as an opportunity to develop new skills, particularly in monitoring and auditing coding outputs, and that sound change management strategies are needed to ensure a successful transition of the clinical coding workforce to new roles. Improved clinical coding accuracy will benefit our health system enormously but it would be naı̈ve to think that computer assisted coding is the complete answer. Clinical coders will be needed in different roles to help realise the benefits of computer assisted coding. To that end, Hay et al. (2020) discussed the role of documentation improvement specialists and how they can ensure adequate documentation that can be translated into clinical codes. This is a potential role for clinical coders who understand both the clinical documentation and the needs of the end users of the coded data. Hay et al. (2020) also outlined the work of the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care, which has promoted improved documentation through its National Safety and Quality Health Service Standards and the use of coded data for monitoring patient safety through its hospital-based outcome indicators. The development of the hospital-based outcome indicators has further elevated the need for high-quality clinical coding. However, barriers exist to achieving quality clinical coding outcomes. Canadian authors, Doktorchik et al. (2020), discussed these barriers in their article ‘A Qualitative Evaluation of Clinically Coded Data Quality From Health Information Manager Perspectives’. Their interviews with health information managers and clinical coding managers revealed that expectations were increasing for high-quality data collection but without additional resources to support this endeavour. They also found that incomplete and disorganised clinical documentation and lack of good communication with clinicians impacted on the quality of clinical coding. These same issues exist in Australia, and I am sure in many other countries around the world. The integrity of clinical coding depends fundamentally on the quality of the patient record. The Portuguese study by Alonso et al. (2020), ‘Health records as the basis of clinical coding: Is the quality adequate? A qualitative study of medical coders’ perceptions’, highlights that clinical records are not just for patient treatment but that the data derived from them are stored in administrative databases and used for many downstream purposes. To that end, the authors conducted focus groups to elicit from clinical coders the problems they face in the health records that influence the quality of the coded data. They identified several issues including missing or incomplete discharge and/or surgical notes, the use of abbreviations, variability in documentation between specialties and lack of specificity in diagnosis descriptions. They also identified that in spite of electronic health records solving illegibility problems, they have created problems of their own, notably the copy and paste facility that results in errors being repeated throughout the record and very large volumes of notes to be
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来源期刊
Health Information Management Journal
Health Information Management Journal 医学-医学:信息
CiteScore
8.70
自引率
12.50%
发文量
17
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Health Information Management Journal (HIMJ) is the official peer-reviewed research journal of the Health Information Management Association of Australia (HIMAA). HIMJ provides a forum for dissemination of original investigations and reviews covering a broad range of topics related to the management and communication of health information including: clinical and administrative health information systems at international, national, hospital and health practice levels; electronic health records; privacy and confidentiality; health classifications and terminologies; health systems, funding and resources management; consumer health informatics; public and population health information management; information technology implementation and evaluation and health information management education.
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