Literature DB >> 29750222

Agile Model Driven Development of Electronic Health Record-Based Specialty Population Registries.

Vaishnavi Kannan1, Jason C Fish1, DuWayne L Willett2.   

Abstract

The transformation of the American healthcare payment system from fee-for-service to value-based care increasingly makes it valuable to develop patient registries for specialized populations, to better assess healthcare quality and costs. Recent widespread adoption of Electronic Health Records (EHRs) in the U.S. now makes possible construction of EHR-based specialty registry data collection tools and reports, previously unfeasible using manual chart abstraction. But the complexities of specialty registry EHR tools and measures, along with the variety of stakeholders involved, can result in misunderstood requirements and frequent product change requests, as users first experience the tools in their actual clinical workflows. Such requirements churn could easily stall progress in specialty registry rollout. Modeling a system's requirements and solution design can be a powerful way to remove ambiguities, facilitate shared understanding, and help evolve a design to meet newly-discovered needs. "Agile Modeling" retains these values while avoiding excessive unused up-front modeling in favor of iterative incremental modeling. Using Agile Modeling principles and practices, in calendar year 2015 one institution developed 58 EHR-based specialty registries, with 111 new data collection tools, supporting 134 clinical process and outcome measures, and enrolling over 16,000 patients. The subset of UML and non-UML models found most consistently useful in designing, building, and iteratively evolving EHR-based specialty registries included User Stories, Domain Models, Use Case Diagrams, Decision Trees, Graphical User Interface Storyboards, Use Case text descriptions, and Solution Class Diagrams.

Entities:  

Year:  2016        PMID: 29750222      PMCID: PMC5940340          DOI: 10.1109/BHI.2016.7455935

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IEEE EMBS Int Conf Biomed Health Inform


  2 in total

1.  The "meaningful use" regulation for electronic health records.

Authors:  David Blumenthal; Marilyn Tavenner
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2010-07-13       Impact factor: 91.245

2.  Launching HITECH.

Authors:  David Blumenthal
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2009-12-30       Impact factor: 91.245

  2 in total
  2 in total

1.  Translating Research into Agile Development (TRIAD): Development of Electronic Health Record Tools for Primary Care Settings.

Authors:  K D Clark; T T Woodson; R J Holden; R Gunn; D J Cohen
Journal:  Methods Inf Med       Date:  2019-07-05       Impact factor: 2.176

2.  User stories as lightweight requirements for agile clinical decision support development.

Authors:  Vaishnavi Kannan; Mujeeb A Basit; Puneet Bajaj; Angela R Carrington; Irma B Donahue; Emily L Flahaven; Richard Medford; Tsedey Melaku; Brett A Moran; Luis E Saldana; Duwayne L Willett; Josh E Youngblood; Seth M Toomay
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2019-11-01       Impact factor: 4.497

  2 in total

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