| Literature DB >> 30977733 |
Georg Duftschmid1, Christoph Rinner1, Simone Katja Sauter1, Gottfried Endel2, Peter Klimek3,4, Christoph Mitsch5, Harald Heinzl6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Health information exchange (HIE) among care providers who cooperate in the treatment of patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) has been rated as an important aspect of successful care. Patient-sharing relations among care providers permit inferences about corresponding information-sharing relations.Entities:
Keywords: Austria; diabetes mellitus; health information exchange; professional-patient relations
Year: 2019 PMID: 30977733 PMCID: PMC6484263 DOI: 10.2196/12172
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Med Inform
Numbers of study care providers per type of care provider.
| Type of care provider | n |
| General Practitioner | 4892 |
| Pharmacy | 2240 |
| Internal medicine | 949 |
| Gynecology | 778 |
| Ophthalmology | 510 |
| Surgery | 441 |
| Orthopedics | 407 |
| Neurology/psychiatry | 391 |
| Dermatology | 329 |
| Otolaryngology | 299 |
| Radiology | 277 |
| Urology | 258 |
| Pulmology | 165 |
| Hospital | 132 |
| Laboratory | 102 |
| Physical medicine | 56 |
Figure 1A total of 3 reduced patient-sharing networks (PSNs) are presented. (a) The care providers on the left of each PSN are referred to as the index care providers, whereas the care providers on the right of each PSN are termed linked care providers. An edge between a patient and a linked care provider means that this patient is shared between the index care provider and the linked care provider. Hence, the PSNs show 3 index health care providers of the same ToCP (type of care provider; blue) sharing patients with linked care providers from 3 ToCPs (blue, orange, green). (b) Linked care providers are aggregated per ToCP (shown as colored triangles); an edge between a patient and a linked ToCP means that this patient is shared among the index care provider and at least one linked care provider of this ToCP. Patient-sharing relations are colored according to the linked care providers’ ToCPs. (c) Shared patients per linked ToCP are calculated; edges depict the proportions (percentages) of patients shared by the index care provider with each linked ToCP. (d) Index care providers are aggregated per ToCP (here only blue is available); edges depict the typical (median) percentages of patients shared with linked ToCPs (here blue, orange, and green).
Figure 2Calculation of typical usual provider cooperation (UPCo) values. (a) We originate from the same patient-sharing network as shown in Figure 1 a. (b) Index care providers’ usual linked care providers (shown as enlarged dots) are determined separately for each ToCP (type of care provider), thereby ties are broken randomly. Patient-sharing relations are colored according to the linked care providers’ ToCPs; relations with the usual linked care provider are emphasized additionally. (c) UPCo values (depicted on edges both as proportions and percentages) are calculated for each ToCP. By way of an example, the UPCo value of 75% in the topmost network indicates that 3 out of 4 patient-sharing relations between the first index care provider and the linked blue care providers are shared with the usual linked blue care provider. (d) Index care providers are aggregated per ToCP; edges depict the typical (median) UPCo values with linked ToCPs. Trivial UPCo values of 100% in case of an index care provider who shared only 1 single patient with only 1 single-linked care provider within a particular ToCP were not considered in our analysis. This was the case in 5.7% of the patient-sharing relations between index care providers and linked ToCPs.
Figure 3Typical (median) portion of patients shared by an index care provider of the ToCP shown in the leftmost column, with linked care providers of the ToCP shown in the topmost row. ToCPs are sorted by the number of care providers per ToCP (compare Table 1). Cells are color-coded with colors ranging from dark green for high values to dark red for low values. Intermediate values are shown in graded color intensities. The bottom row and the right-most column show the mean value of the corresponding column’s respectively row’s values. As a measure of variance, interquartile ranges are given in Multimedia Appendix 3. GP: general practitioner; pharm: pharmacy; int med: internal medicine; gynaec: gynecology; ophthalm: ophthalmology; surg: surgery; orthop: orthopedics; neurol/psych: neurology/psychiatry; dermat: dermatology; otolaryng: otolaryngology; radiol: radiology; urol: urology; pulm: pulmology; hosp: hospital; lab: laboratory; phys med: physical medicine.
Figure 4Typical (median) UPCo values of an index care provider of the ToCP shown in the left-most column with a linked care provider of the ToCP shown in the topmost row. ToCPs are sorted by the number of care providers per ToCP (compare Table 1). Cells are color-coded with colors ranging from dark green for high values to dark red for low values. Intermediate values are shown in graded color intensities. The bottom row and the right-most column show the mean value of the corresponding column’s respectively row’s values. As a measure of variance, interquartile ranges are given in Multimedia Appendix 3. GP: general practitioner; pharm: pharmacy; int med: internal medicine; gynaec: gynecology; ophthalm: ophthalmology; surg: surgery; orthop: orthopedics; neurol/psych: neurology/psychiatry; dermat: dermatology; otolaryng: otolaryngology; radiol: radiology; urol: urology; pulm: pulmology; hosp: hospital; lab: laboratory; phys med: physical medicine.