| Literature DB >> 28284190 |
Debra Revere1, Rebecca H Hills2, Brian E Dixon3, P Joseph Gibson4, Shaun J Grannis5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The future of notifiable condition reporting in the United States is undergoing a transformation with the increasing development of Health Information Exchanges which support electronic data-sharing and -transfer networks and the wider adoption of electronic laboratory reporting. Communicable disease report forms originating in clinics are an important source of surveillance data for public health agencies. However, problems of poor data quality and delayed submission of reports to public health agencies are common. In addition, studies of barriers and facilitators to reporting have assumed that the primary reporter is the treating physician, although the extent to which a provider is involved in the reporting workflow is unclear. We sought to better understand the barriers to and burden of notifiable condition reporting from the perspectives of the three primary groups involved in reporting workflow: providers, clinic staff who bear the principal responsibility for reporting, and the public health workers who receive and process reports from clinics. In addition, we sought to situate these findings within the context of the future of notifiable disease reporting and the potential impacts of electronic lab and medical records on the surveillance system.Entities:
Keywords: Communicable Diseases; Disease Notification; Interprofessional Relations; Public Health Surveillance; Qualitative Research; Quality Control
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28284190 PMCID: PMC5346201 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-017-4156-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Enrolled clinic characteristics
| Clinic | Location | Provider Type: Number | Service | # patients/month | Mode: Lab Orders | Mode: CDR → PHA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Urban | MD:9; NP:4 | Primary Care | 1000 | electronic | fax |
| 2 | Urban | MD:140; NP:5 | Primary Care | 6700 | electronic | fax out of EMR |
| 3 | Urban | MD:8 | Teen Clinic | 1000 | electronic | fax |
| 4 | Urban | MD:37; NP:1; PA:2 | Adult Medicine | 2860 | electronic | fax/mail |
| 5 | Urban | MD:10; NP:1 | Primary Care | 2600 | electronic | |
| 6 | Urban | MD:9 | Women’s Health | 1000 | paper, fax | fax |
| 7 | Rural | MD:2 | Primary Care | 1200 | paper | fax |
MD Medical Doctor, NP Nurse Practitioner, PA Physician’s Assistant, CDR Communicable Disease Reporting, PHA Public Health Agency
Provider knowledge of & experience with notifiable condition reporting & forms
| Yes | |
|---|---|
| Have you ever completed a notifiable condition report form? | 17 (61) |
| In the past year, have you received any training about Indiana’s reportable conditions requirements? | 6 (21) |
| Does your clinic or organization have specific protocols for reporting cases to public health or the health department? | 24 (86) |
| In the past year, were you provided with a list of conditions to report to public health or the health department? | 8 (28) |
| Are you familiar with the different time frames for reporting specific notifiable conditions to public health or the health department? | 5 (17) |
| In the past year, did you receive any calls from public health or the health department regarding a reportable case? | 3 (11) |
| In the past year, did you need to call public health or the health department regarding a reportable case? | 8 (29) |
Fig. 1Provider Survey: Frequency at which providers encounter specific barriers to reporting
Major themes with frequencies of sub-themes coded in clinic reporter (n = 11) and PHA worker (n = 9) interviews
| Clinics | PHAs | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
|
| Notifiable condition reporting is not a burden or time-consuming activity or interruptive of daily workflow for regular reporters | 7 (63.6) | - |
| Reporting requirements (who should report, which conditions are reportable, which forms to use, reporting timeframes for different conditions) are clear for regular reporters | 7 (63.6) | - | |
| Clinic settings in which regular reporters work have a well-established flow of information and process for handling new positive cases of reportable conditions | 7 (63.6) | - | |
| Infrequent reporters perceive notifiable condition reporting as burdensome and interruptive of their workflow | 4 (36.4) | - | |
| Reporting requirements are not clear for infrequent reporters | 4 (36.4) | - | |
| Infrequent reporters assume that labs report notifiable conditions | 4 (36.4) | - | |
| Infrequent reporters express confusion about whether their organization requires notifiable condition reporting | 4 (36.4) | - | |
|
| |||
|
| Reporting workflow in begins with receipt of a positive lab result in both clinics and PHAs | 11 (100) | 9 (100) |
| PHA workers begin case processing activities with receipt of a positive lab result | - | 9 (100) | |
| Other than treatment orders based on a lab report, physicians are not involved reporting workflow | 11 (100) | ||
| Lab reports are missing critical information, such as clinic name, patient phone number, etc., so are insufficient alone for case reporting | - | 9 (100) | |
| Delays in lab reporting contribute to delayed CDR form completion | 3 (27.3) | ||
|
| |||
| Sub-themes: | PHA workers perceive the majority of CDR forms they receive as generally incomplete, missing crucial information and low in data quality | - | 9 (100) |
| PHA workers report frequent communications with clinics to gather needed case information | - | 9 (100) | |
| PHA workers perceive that communications with clinics around reporting can be unproductive and frustrating | - | 9 (100) | |
| Clinics are perceived as infrequent reporters due to their assumption that labs report to PHAs | - | 9 (100) | |
| Specific to communications around notifiable condition reporting, clinic reporters perceive frequency of contact from PHAs as rare | 8 (72.7) | - | |
| Inaccurate or missing contact information prevents reaching patients regarding treatment | 6 (54.5) | 9 (100) | |
| Clinic reporters assume labs report so do not regularly submit CDR forms | 4 (36.4) | - | |
| Clinic reporters are unaware that they are required to submit CDR forms | 4 (36.4) | - | |
| Clinic reporters knowingly submit CDR forms with missing information | 3 (27.3) | - | |
| Clinic reporters only complete CDR form fields that they deem pertinent | 2 (18.2) | - | |
|
| |||
| Sub-themes: | Numerous and varied information resources are utilized to complete CDR forms, conduct investigations and/or close cases | 9 (81.8) | 9 (100) |
| Clinic reporters spend time looking for, waiting for and compiling information from various sources (EHRs, different reporting and/or clinical systems, chart notes, lab reports, online searches, etc.) | 7 (63.6) | - | |
| PHA workers spend a majority of their time looking for and compiling information from various sources to conduct case processing | - | 9 (100) | |
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| |||
| Sub-themes: | Clinic reporters do not have a clear idea about how information such as CDR form data is used by PHAs | 8 (72.7) | - |
| Announcements and information sent by PHAs (fax, email) are not routinely distributed throughout the clinic | 5 (45.5) | - | |
| Some clinics report they never receive announcements or information from PHAs | 4 (36.4) | - | |
| Only PHA information deemed relevant is disseminated but how that determination is made is unclear to recipients | 3 (27.3) | - | |