| Literature DB >> 22690967 |
Michael Klompas1, Jason McVetta, Ross Lazarus, Emma Eggleston, Gillian Haney, Benjamin A Kruskal, W Katherine Yih, Patricia Daly, Paul Oppedisano, Brianne Beagan, Michael Lee, Chaim Kirby, Dawn Heisey-Grove, Alfred DeMaria, Richard Platt.
Abstract
Electronic medical record (EMR) systems have rich potential to improve integration between primary care and the public health system at the point of care. EMRs make it possible for clinicians to contribute timely, clinically detailed surveillance data to public health practitioners without changing their existing workflows or incurring extra work. New surveillance systems can extract raw data from providers' EMRs, analyze them for conditions of public health interest, and automatically communicate results to health departments. We describe a model EMR-based public health surveillance platform called Electronic Medical Record Support for Public Health (ESP). The ESP platform provides live, automated surveillance for notifiable diseases, influenza-like illness, and diabetes prevalence, care, and complications. Results are automatically transmitted to state health departments.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22690967 PMCID: PMC3478075 DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2012.300811
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Public Health ISSN: 0090-0036 Impact factor: 9.308