Using Electronically Available Inpatient Hospital Data for Research

Despite a push to create electronic health records and a plethora of healthcare data from disparate sources, there are no data from a single electronic source that provide a full picture of a patient’s hospital course. This paper describes a process to utilize electronically available inpatient hosp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical and translational science 2011-10, Vol.4 (5), p.338-345
Hauptverfasser: Apte, Mandar, Neidell, Matthew, Yoko Furuya, E., Caplan, David, Glied, Sherry, Larson, Elaine
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container_end_page 345
container_issue 5
container_start_page 338
container_title Clinical and translational science
container_volume 4
creator Apte, Mandar
Neidell, Matthew
Yoko Furuya, E.
Caplan, David
Glied, Sherry
Larson, Elaine
description Despite a push to create electronic health records and a plethora of healthcare data from disparate sources, there are no data from a single electronic source that provide a full picture of a patient’s hospital course. This paper describes a process to utilize electronically available inpatient hospital data for research. We linked several different sources of extracted data, including clinical, procedural, administrative, and accounting data, using patients’ medical record numbers to compile a cohesive, comprehensive account of patient encounters. Challenges encountered included (1) interacting with distinct administrative units to locate data elements; (2) finding a secure, central location to house the data; (3) appropriately defining health measures of interest; (4) obtaining and linking these data to create a usable format for conducting research; and (5) dealing with missing data. Although the resulting data set is incredibly rich and likely to prove useful for a wide range of clinical and comparative effectiveness research questions, there are multiple challenges associated with linking hospital data to improve the quality of patient care. Clin Trans Sci 2011; Volume 4: 338–345
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1752-8062.2011.00353.x
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Biomedical Research - statistics & numerical data
Catheterization, Central Venous - statistics & numerical data
Communicable Diseases - epidemiology
Communicable Diseases - microbiology
electronic data
Electronic Health Records - statistics & numerical data
Female
Hospitals - statistics & numerical data
Humans
ICD9 codes
Inpatients
Male
New York - epidemiology
Patient Discharge - statistics & numerical data
Statistics as Topic
surveillance
title Using Electronically Available Inpatient Hospital Data for Research
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