OpenMRS as an emergency EMR—How we used a global good to create an emergency EMR in a week

•Open-source global goods can be adapted to meet needs during a disaster response.•Crisis situations can lead to innovative solutions.•Lessons from adapting OpenMRS for COVID-19 can be leveraged for future responses. As the coronavirus pandemic progressed through the United States, Indianapolis Emer...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of medical informatics (Shannon, Ireland) Ireland), 2021-05, Vol.149, p.104433-104433, Article 104433
Hauptverfasser: Mamlin, Burke W., Shivers, Jennifer E., Glober, Nancy K., Dick, Jonathan J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Open-source global goods can be adapted to meet needs during a disaster response.•Crisis situations can lead to innovative solutions.•Lessons from adapting OpenMRS for COVID-19 can be leveraged for future responses. As the coronavirus pandemic progressed through the United States, Indianapolis Emergency Medical Services (IEMS) identified a gap between the health system capacity and the projected need to support an overwhelmed health care system. In addressing emergencies or special cases, each medical institution in a metropolitan area typically has a siloed process for capturing emergency patient records. These approaches vary in technical capabilities and may include use of an electronic medical record system (EMR) or a hybrid paper/EMR process. Given the projected volume of patients for the COVID-19 pandemic and the proposed multi-institutional team approach needed in case of significant provider illness, IEMS sought a simple, efficient, consolidated EMR solution to support planning for the potential capacity gap. IEMS approached Regenstrief Institute (RI), an established partner with experience in supporting OpenMRS, a global good EMR platform that had been deployed in multiple settings globally. The purpose of this project was to determine if OpenMRS, a global good, could be used to quickly stand up a system that would meet the needs for health emergency data collection and reporting. The team used an “all hands on deck” approach, bringing together technical and subject matter experts, and a human-centered and iterative process to ensure the system met the key needs of IEMS. The OpenMRS Reference Application was adapted to the specific need and deployed as Docker containers to servers within the Indiana Health Information Exchange. In less than two weeks, the Regenstrief team was able to install, configure and set up a working version of OpenMRS to support the desired electronic record requirements for the IEMS disaster field clinics. Using a human-centered approach, the RI team developed, tested, and released a user-friendly, installation-ready solution complete with an end user manual and a base support plan. IEMS and RI are sharing this approach to demonstrate how a global good can quickly generate a solution for COVID-19 and other disaster responses. Open source global goods can rapidly be adapted to meet local needs in an emergency. OpenMRS can be adapted to meet the needs of basic emergency medical services registration, triage, and basic data
ISSN:1386-5056
1872-8243
DOI:10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2021.104433