Literature DB >> 26769124

SPIRIT: Systematic Planning of Intelligent Reuse of Integrated Clinical Routine Data. A Conceptual Best-practice Framework and Procedure Model.

W O Hackl1, E Ammenwerth.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Secondary use of clinical routine data is receiving an increasing amount of attention in biomedicine and healthcare. However, building and analysing integrated clinical routine data repositories are nontrivial, challenging tasks. As in most evolving fields, recognized standards, well-proven methodological frameworks, or accurately described best-practice approaches for the systematic planning of solutions for secondary use of routine medical record data are missing.
OBJECTIVE: We propose a conceptual best-practice framework and procedure model for the systematic planning of intelligent reuse of integrated clinical routine data (SPIRIT).
METHODS: SPIRIT was developed based on a broad literature overview and further refined in two case studies with different kinds of clinical routine data, including process-oriented nursing data from a large hospital group and high-volume multimodal clinical data from a neurologic intensive care unit.
RESULTS: SPIRIT aims at tailoring secondary use solutions to specific needs of single departments without losing sight of the institution as a whole. It provides a general conceptual best-practice framework consisting of three parts: First, a secondary use strategy for the whole organization is determined. Second, comprehensive analyses are conducted from two different viewpoints to define the requirements regarding a clinical routine data reuse solution at the system level from the data perspective (BOTTOM UP) and at the strategic level from the future users perspective (TOP DOWN). An obligatory clinical context analysis (IN BETWEEN) facilitates refinement, combination, and integration of the different requirements. The third part of SPIRIT is dedicated to implementation, which comprises design and realization of clinical data integration and management as well as data analysis solutions.
CONCLUSIONS: The SPIRIT framework is intended to be used to systematically plan the intelligent reuse of clinical routine data for multiple purposes, which often was not intended when the primary clinical documentation systems were implemented. SPIRIT helps to overcome this gap. It can be applied in healthcare institutions of any size or specialization and allows a stepwise setup and evolution of holistic clinical routine data reuse solutions.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Data collection; big data; business intelligence; clinical routine data reuse; data analysis; data warehousing; databases as topic; secondary use

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26769124     DOI: 10.3414/ME15-01-0045

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Methods Inf Med        ISSN: 0026-1270            Impact factor:   2.176


  6 in total

1.  A Nursing Intelligence System to Support Secondary Use of Nursing Routine Data.

Authors:  W O Hackl; F Rauchegger; E Ammenwerth
Journal:  Appl Clin Inform       Date:  2015-06-24       Impact factor: 2.342

2.  Evaluation Considerations for Secondary Uses of Clinical Data: Principles for an Evidence-based Approach to Policy and Implementation of Secondary Analysis.

Authors:  P J Scott; M Rigby; E Ammenwerth; J Brender McNair; A Georgiou; H Hyppönen; N de Keizer; F Magrabi; P Nykänen; W T Gude; W Hackl
Journal:  Yearb Med Inform       Date:  2017-09-11

3.  Electronic Support for Retrospective Analysis in the Field of Radiation Oncology: Proof of Principle Using an Example of Fractionated Stereotactic Radiotherapy of 251 Meningioma Patients.

Authors:  Sandra Rutzner; Rainer Fietkau; Thomas Ganslandt; Hans-Ulrich Prokosch; Dorota Lubgan
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2017-02-09       Impact factor: 6.244

4.  EsPRit: ethics committee proposals for Long Term Medical Data Registries in rapidly evolving research fields - a future-proof best practice approach.

Authors:  S Oberbichler; W O Hackl; A Hörbst
Journal:  BMC Med Inform Decis Mak       Date:  2017-10-18       Impact factor: 2.796

5.  Setting up research infrastructure for secondary use of routinely collected health care data in Croatia.

Authors:  Kristina Fišter; Borna Pleše; Ivan Pristaš; Tobias Kurth; Mirjana Kujundžić Tiljak
Journal:  Croat Med J       Date:  2017-10-31       Impact factor: 1.351

6.  Challenges using electronic nursing routine data for outcome analyses: A mixed methods study.

Authors:  Renate Nantschev; Elske Ammenwerth
Journal:  Int J Nurs Sci       Date:  2021-11-29
  6 in total

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