Privacy-preserving architecture for providing feedback to clinicians on their clinical performance

被引:3
|
作者
Yigzaw, Kassaye Yitbarek [1 ]
Budrionis, Andrius [1 ]
Marco-Ruiz, Luis [1 ]
Henriksen, Torje Dahle [1 ]
Halvorsen, Peder A. [2 ]
Bellika, Johan Gustav [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hosp North Norway, Norwegian Ctr E Hlth Res, N-9019 Tromso, Norway
[2] UiT Arctic Univ Norway, Dept Community Med, Fac Hlth Sci, N-9037 Tromso, Norway
[3] UiT Arctic Univ Norway, Dept Clin Med, Fac Hlth Sci, N-9037 Tromso, Norway
关键词
Learning healthcare system; Feedback; Peer comparison; privacy; Security; Antibiotic prescriptions; Quality improvement; ANTIMICROBIAL STEWARDSHIP INTERVENTION; BEHAVIORAL INTERVENTIONS; QUALITY; SYSTEM;
D O I
10.1186/s12911-020-01147-5
中图分类号
R-058 [];
学科分类号
摘要
Background Learning from routine healthcare data is important for the improvement of the quality of care. Providing feedback on clinicians' performance in comparison to their peers has been shown to be more efficient for quality improvements. However, the current methods for providing feedback do not fully address the privacy concerns of stakeholders. Methods The paper proposes a distributed architecture for providing feedback to clinicians on their clinical performances while protecting their privacy. The indicators for the clinical performance of a clinician are computed within a healthcare institution based on pseudonymized data extracted from the electronic health record (EHR) system. Group-level indicators of clinicians across healthcare institutions are computed using privacy-preserving distributed data-mining techniques. A clinician receives feedback reports that compare his or her personal indicators with the aggregated indicators of the individual's peers. Indicators aggregated across different geographical levels are the basis for monitoring changes in the quality of care. The architecture feasibility was practically evaluated in three general practitioner (GP) offices in Norway that consist of about 20,245 patients. The architecture was applied for providing feedback reports to 21 GPs on their antibiotic prescriptions for selected respiratory tract infections (RTIs). Each GP received one feedback report that covered antibiotic prescriptions between 2015 and 2018, stratified yearly. We assessed the privacy protection and computation time of the architecture. Results Our evaluation indicates that the proposed architecture is feasible for practical use and protects the privacy of the patients, clinicians, and healthcare institutions. The architecture also maintains the physical access control of healthcare institutions over the patient data. We sent a single feedback report to each of the 21 GPs. A total of 14,396 cases were diagnosed with the selected RTIs during the study period across the institutions. Of these cases, 2924 (20.3%) were treated with antibiotics, where 40.8% (1194) of the antibiotic prescriptions were narrow-spectrum antibiotics. Conclusions It is feasible to provide feedback to clinicians on their clinical performance in comparison to peers across healthcare institutions while protecting privacy. The architecture also enables monitoring changes in the quality of care following interventions.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Privacy-preserving architecture for providing feedback to clinicians on their clinical performance
    Kassaye Yitbarek Yigzaw
    Andrius Budrionis
    Luis Marco-Ruiz
    Torje Dahle Henriksen
    Peder A. Halvorsen
    Johan Gustav Bellika
    BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making, 20
  • [2] Rings for Privacy: An Architecture for Privacy-Preserving User Profiling
    Barcellona, C.
    Tinnirello, I.
    Merani, M. L.
    2014 IEEE CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER COMMUNICATIONS WORKSHOPS (INFOCOM WKSHPS), 2014, : 199 - +
  • [3] Privacy-Preserving Cloud-IoT Architecture
    Jaimunk, Jenjira
    2019 IEEE/ACM 6TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MOBILE SOFTWARE ENGINEERING AND SYSTEMS (MOBILESOFT 2019), 2019, : 146 - 147
  • [4] Towards Privacy-Preserving Neural Architecture Search
    Wang, Fuyi
    Zhang, Leo Yu
    Pan, Lei
    Hu, Shengshan
    Doss, Robin
    2022 27TH IEEE SYMPOSIUM ON COMPUTERS AND COMMUNICATIONS (IEEE ISCC 2022), 2022,
  • [5] Analysing Privacy-Preserving Constraints in Microservices Architecture
    Vistbakka, Inna
    Troubitsyna, Elena
    2020 IEEE 44TH ANNUAL COMPUTERS, SOFTWARE, AND APPLICATIONS CONFERENCE (COMPSAC 2020), 2020, : 1089 - 1090
  • [6] Privacy-Preserving Architecture for Forensic Image Recognition
    Peter, Andreas
    Hartmann, Thomas
    Mueller, Sascha
    Katzenbeisser, Stefan
    2012 IEEE INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON INFORMATION FORENSICS AND SECURITY (WIFS), 2012, : 79 - 84
  • [7] A Privacy-Preserving and Standard-Based Architecture for Secondary Use of Clinical Data
    Ciampi, Mario
    Sicuranza, Mario
    Silvestri, Stefano
    INFORMATION, 2022, 13 (02)
  • [8] Predicting the Performance of Privacy-Preserving Data Analytics Using Architecture Modelling and Simulation
    Yasaweerasinghelage, Rajitha
    Staples, Mark
    Weber, Ingo
    Paik, Hye-Young
    2018 IEEE 15TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SOFTWARE ARCHITECTURE (ICSA), 2018, : 166 - 175
  • [9] Privacy-Preserving Collaborative Learning: A Scheme Providing Heterogeneous Protection
    Wang, Xin
    Zhang, Heng
    Yang, Ming
    Wu, Xiaoming
    Cheng, Peng
    IEEE INTERNET OF THINGS JOURNAL, 2024, 11 (02) : 1840 - 1853
  • [10] Rings for Privacy: An Architecture for Large Scale Privacy-Preserving Data Mining
    Merani, Maria Luisa
    Croce, Daniele
    Tinnirello, Ilenia
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PARALLEL AND DISTRIBUTED SYSTEMS, 2021, 32 (06) : 1340 - 1352