Combining Health Data Uses to Ignite Health System Learning

被引:47
|
作者
Ainsworth, J. [1 ,2 ]
Buchan, I. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Manchester, Farr Inst Hlth Informat Res, Hlth eRes Ctr, Manchester M13 9PL, Lancs, England
[2] Univ Manchester, Ctr Hlth Informat, Inst Populat Hlth, Manchester M13 9PL, Lancs, England
关键词
Health data reuse; secondary uses; meaningful use; learning health systems; adaptive health systems; intelligence pipelines; healthcare evidence; population health; TRIALS; EUROSCORE; DISEASE; COSTS;
D O I
10.3414/ME15-01-0064
中图分类号
TP [自动化技术、计算机技术];
学科分类号
0812 ;
摘要
Objectives: In this paper we aim to characterise the critical mass of linked data, methods and expertise required for health systems to adapt to the needs of the populations they serve - more recently known as learning health systems. The objectives are to: 1) identify opportunities to combine separate uses of common data sources in order to reduce duplication of data processing and improve information quality; 2) identify challenges in scaling-up the reuse of health data sufficiently to support health system learning. Methods: The challenges and opportunities were identified through a series of e-health stakeholder consultations and workshops in Northern England from 2011 to 2014. From 2013 the concepts presented here have been refined through feedback to collaborators, including patient/citizen representatives, in a regional health informatics research network (www.herc.ac.uk). Results: Health systems typically have sepa rate information pipelines for: 1) commissioning services; 2) auditing service performance; 3) managing finances; 4) monitoring public health; and 5) research. These pipe-lines share common data sources but usually duplicate data extraction, aggregation, cleaning/preparation and analytics. Suboptimal analyses may be performed due to a lack of expertise, which may exist elsewhere in the health system but is fully committed to a different pipeline. Contextual knowledge that is essential for proper data analysis and interpretation may be needed in one pipeline but accessible only in another. The lack of capable health and care intelligence systems for populations can be attributed to a legacy of three flawed assumptions: 1) universality: the generalizability of evidence across populations; 2) time-invariance: the stability of evidence over time; and 3) reducibility: the reduction of evidence into specialised subsystems that may be recombined. Conclusions: We conceptualize a population health and care intelligence system capable of supporting health system learning and we put forward a set of maturity tests of progress toward such a system. A factor common to each test is data-action latency; a mature system spawns timely actions proportionate to the information that can be derived from the data, and in doing so creates meaningful measurement about system learning. We illustrate, using future scenarios, some major opportunities to improve health systems by exchanging conventional intelligence pipelines for networked critical masses of data, methods and expertise that minimise data-action latency and ignite system-learning.
引用
收藏
页码:479 / 487
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] DO HEALTH-RELATED BEHAVIORS IGNITE PERFORMANCE?
    Groppel, Jack
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH PROMOTION, 2014, 28 (05) : THAP6 - THAP8
  • [32] A health care monitoring system that uses ontology agents
    Christopoulou, Stella C.
    Kotsilieris, Theodore
    Anagnostopoulos, Ioannis
    2016 11TH INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON SEMANTIC AND SOCIAL MEDIA ADAPTATION AND PERSONALIZATION (SMAP), 2016, : 41 - 45
  • [33] Unraveling Uses and Effects of an Interactive Health Communication System
    Han, Jeong Yeob
    Hawkins, Robert P.
    Shaw, Bret R.
    Pingree, Suzanne
    McTavish, Fiona
    Gustafson, David H.
    JOURNAL OF BROADCASTING & ELECTRONIC MEDIA, 2009, 53 (01) : 112 - 133
  • [34] A Data Capture System for Outcomes Studies that Integrates with Electronic Health Records: Development and Potential Uses
    Keiichi Yamamoto
    Shigemi Matsumoto
    Harue Tada
    Kazuhiro Yanagihara
    Satoshi Teramukai
    Tadamasa Takemura
    Masanori Fukushima
    Journal of Medical Systems, 2008, 32 : 423 - 427
  • [35] A data capture system for outcomes studies that integrates with electronic health records: Development and potential uses
    Yamamoto, Keiichi
    Matsumoto, Shigemi
    Tada, Harue
    Yanagihara, Kazuhiro
    Teramukai, Satoshi
    Takemura, Tadamasa
    Fukushima, Masanori
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SYSTEMS, 2008, 32 (05) : 423 - 427
  • [36] Health care management research & the Learning Health System
    Hearld, Larry R.
    Rathert, Cheryl
    HEALTH CARE MANAGEMENT REVIEW, 2021, 46 (03) : 173 - 173
  • [37] Expanding the learning health system model to be health literate
    Rosen, Michael A.
    Himmelfarb, Cheryl Dennison
    Bauer, Thomas
    Mullins, C. Daniel
    JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE EFFECTIVENESS RESEARCH, 2022, 11 (15) : 1079 - 1083
  • [38] Enhancing Data Quality through Electronic Health Records in Prison Settings: Towards a Learning Health System
    Bes, J.
    Bos, I
    Elffers, B.
    Heins, M.
    Verheij, R.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2024, 34
  • [39] A Learning Health-Care System for Improving Renal Health Services in Peru Using Data Analytics
    Mita, Vielka
    Castillo, Liliana
    Luis Castillo-Sequera, Jose
    Wong, Lenis
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ONLINE AND BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING, 2023, 19 (14) : 76 - 97
  • [40] Advancing the Learning Health System
    McGinnis, J. Michael
    Fineberg, Harvey V.
    Dzau, Victor J.
    NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2021, 385 (01): : 1 - 5