Standardized Cardiovascular Data for Clinical Research, Registries, and Patient Care

Relatively little attention has been focused on standardization of data exchange in clinical research studies and patient care activities. Both are usually managed locally using separate and generally incompatible data systems at individual hospitals or clinics. In the past decade there have been na...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American College of Cardiology 2013-05, Vol.61 (18), p.1835-1846
Hauptverfasser: Anderson, H. Vernon, MD, Weintraub, William S., MD, Radford, Martha J., MD, Kremers, Mark S., MD, Roe, Matthew T., MD, MHS, Shaw, Richard E., PhD, Pinchotti, Dana M., BS, Tcheng, James E., MD
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container_end_page 1846
container_issue 18
container_start_page 1835
container_title Journal of the American College of Cardiology
container_volume 61
creator Anderson, H. Vernon, MD
Weintraub, William S., MD
Radford, Martha J., MD
Kremers, Mark S., MD
Roe, Matthew T., MD, MHS
Shaw, Richard E., PhD
Pinchotti, Dana M., BS
Tcheng, James E., MD
description Relatively little attention has been focused on standardization of data exchange in clinical research studies and patient care activities. Both are usually managed locally using separate and generally incompatible data systems at individual hospitals or clinics. In the past decade there have been nascent efforts to create data standards for clinical research and patient care data, and to some extent these are helpful in providing a degree of uniformity. Nonetheless, these data standards generally have not been converted into accepted computer-based language structures that could permit reliable data exchange across computer networks. The National Cardiovascular Research Infrastructure (NCRI) project was initiated with a major objective of creating a model framework for standard data exchange in all clinical research, clinical registry, and patient care environments, including all electronic health records. The goal is complete syntactic and semantic interoperability. A Data Standards Workgroup was established to create or identify and then harmonize clinical definitions for a base set of standardized cardiovascular data elements that could be used in this network infrastructure. Recognizing the need for continuity with prior efforts, the Workgroup examined existing data standards sources. A basic set of 353 elements was selected. The NCRI staff then collaborated with the 2 major technical standards organizations in health care, the Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium and Health Level Seven International, as well as with staff from the National Cancer Institute Enterprise Vocabulary Services. Modeling and mapping were performed to represent (instantiate) the data elements in appropriate technical computer language structures for endorsement as an accepted data standard for public access and use. Fully implemented, these elements will facilitate clinical research, registry reporting, administrative reporting and regulatory compliance, and patient care.
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Vernon, MD ; Weintraub, William S., MD ; Radford, Martha J., MD ; Kremers, Mark S., MD ; Roe, Matthew T., MD, MHS ; Shaw, Richard E., PhD ; Pinchotti, Dana M., BS ; Tcheng, James E., MD</creator><creatorcontrib>Anderson, H. Vernon, MD ; Weintraub, William S., MD ; Radford, Martha J., MD ; Kremers, Mark S., MD ; Roe, Matthew T., MD, MHS ; Shaw, Richard E., PhD ; Pinchotti, Dana M., BS ; Tcheng, James E., MD</creatorcontrib><description>Relatively little attention has been focused on standardization of data exchange in clinical research studies and patient care activities. Both are usually managed locally using separate and generally incompatible data systems at individual hospitals or clinics. In the past decade there have been nascent efforts to create data standards for clinical research and patient care data, and to some extent these are helpful in providing a degree of uniformity. Nonetheless, these data standards generally have not been converted into accepted computer-based language structures that could permit reliable data exchange across computer networks. The National Cardiovascular Research Infrastructure (NCRI) project was initiated with a major objective of creating a model framework for standard data exchange in all clinical research, clinical registry, and patient care environments, including all electronic health records. The goal is complete syntactic and semantic interoperability. A Data Standards Workgroup was established to create or identify and then harmonize clinical definitions for a base set of standardized cardiovascular data elements that could be used in this network infrastructure. Recognizing the need for continuity with prior efforts, the Workgroup examined existing data standards sources. A basic set of 353 elements was selected. 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subjects American Recovery & Reinvestment Act 2009-US
Cardiology
Cardiovascular
Computer networks
controlled
Data dictionaries
data standards
Electronic health records
Hospitals
informatics
Internal Medicine
Interoperability
Lung diseases
medical
Oxygen therapy
Semantics
Sleep
Sleep apnea
Tobacco
vocabulary
title Standardized Cardiovascular Data for Clinical Research, Registries, and Patient Care
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