| Literature DB >> 23816161 |
Benedict Daniel Michael1, David Geleta.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Identification and tracking of important communicable diseases is pivotal to our understanding of the geographical distribution of disease, the emergence and spread of novel and resistant infections, and are of particular importance for public health policy planning. Moreover, understanding of current clinical practice norms is essential to audit clinical care, identify areas of concern, and develop interventions to improve care quality.However, there are several barriers to obtaining these research data. For example current disease surveillance mechanisms make it difficult for the busy doctor to know which diseases to notify, to whom and how, and are also time consuming. Consequently, many cases go un-notified. In addition assessments of current clinical practice are typically limited to small retrospective audits in individual hospitals.Therefore, we developed a free smartphone application to try to increase the identification of major infectious diseases and other acute medical presentations and improve our understanding of clinical practice. DESCRIPTION: Within the first month there were over 1000 downloads and over 600 specific disease notifications, coming from a broad range of specialities, grades and from all across the globe, including some resource poor settings.Notifications have already provided important information, such as new cases of TB meningitis, resistant HIV and rabies, and important clinical information, such as where patient with myocardial infarctions are and are not receiving potentially life-saving therapy.The database generated can also answer new, dynamic and targeted questions. When a new guideline is released, for example for a new pandemic infection, we can track, in real-time, the global usage of the guideline and whether the recommendations are being followed. In addition this allows identification of where cases with key markers of severe disease are occurring. This is a potential resource for guideline-producing bodies, clinical governance and public health institutions and also for patient recruitment into ongoing studies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23816161 PMCID: PMC3726456 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6947-13-70
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Figure 1Guideline and database views, with questions being answered.
Figure 2Launching the ClickClinica© application and initial registration.
Figure 3Real-time global disease database generation; Live 10.23 am, 5th November 2012.
Examples of data collected for disease surveillance and clinical care quality assessment
| Disease Surveillance | Three new cases of TB meningitis: one in the UK and two in Pakistan |
| | Diagnosis of rabies in Myanmar |
| Clinical care quality | Of 48 patients with an ST-elevation myocardial infarction; seven received intravenous nitrates; only two received thrombolysis |
| | Of 21 patients with exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; five required non-invasive ventilation; only two were able to be managed in the community |
| | Of the eight patients with dementia, only three were prescribed an anticholinergic |
| | Of five patients with HIV, one required 2nd line therapy for drug-resistant disease |
| Assessing dissemination and education | 23 doctors assessed a patient with suspected meningitis, decided whether to perform a lumbar puncture and then watched the video on how to do it |
Figure 4Schematic demonstrating data transfer of content and reports between users, researchers and the central team.