| Literature DB >> 31376277 |
Elham Hatef1,2, Masoud Rouhizadeh3, Iddrisu Tia4, Elyse Lasser1, Felicia Hill-Briggs5,6,7,8,9, Jill Marsteller8,9,10,11, Hadi Kharrazi1,4,9,10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Most US health care providers have adopted electronic health records (EHRs) that facilitate the uniform collection of clinical information. However, standardized data formats to capture social and behavioral determinants of health (SBDH) in structured EHR fields are still evolving and not adopted widely. Consequently, at the point of care, SBDH data are often documented within unstructured EHR fields that require time-consuming and subjective methods to retrieve. Meanwhile, collecting SBDH data using traditional surveys on a large sample of patients is infeasible for health care providers attempting to rapidly incorporate SBDH data in their population health management efforts. A potential approach to facilitate targeted SBDH data collection is applying information extraction methods to EHR data to prescreen the population for identification of immediate social needs.Entities:
Keywords: electronic health record; multi-level health care system; natural language processing; social and behavioral determinants of health; structured data; unstructured data
Year: 2019 PMID: 31376277 PMCID: PMC6696855 DOI: 10.2196/13802
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Med Inform
Collection methods and characteristics of selected social and behavioral determinants of health in electronic health records’ structured dataa.
| Common collection method | Completeness rate | Collection date | Facility type | History and details | Other collection methodsb | |
| Upon registration of each encounter. Documented as a street name and number, an optional line for apartment or other information, a city, a state or province, and a zip code. | Approximately 5.2 million patients (95%) | 2003-Current | All facilities at the time of registration | Approximately 66% of patients’ address change records are available, with effective start and end dates to track address change over time | Billing address, claims processing address, home health encounters and episodes, communications for specific encounters | |
| Upon registration of each encounter | Approximately 2.7 million patients (50%) | 2003-Current | All facilities at the time of registration | Ethnicity (Hispanic or non-Hispanic) captured separately from race | Transplant organ donors, ethnicity questionnaire, ethnicity origin questionnaire | |
| Upon registration of each encounter | Approximately 4.9 million patients (90%) indicated at least one race | 2003-Current | All facilities at the time of registration | Patients can self-identify multiple races | Home health, transplant organ donors | |
| At the time of admission | 2,718,416 patients (50%) | 2003-Current | All facilities at the time of an encounter | The top preferred languages, by unique patient count: English (2,626,379, 48.6%) and Spanish (53,446, 0.9%)c | Flowsheets, questionnaires, clinical notes | |
| Social history portion of electronic health record during a patient encounter, whether in-person or not in-person encounters (telephone, MyChartd, documentation) | 490,348 (9.08%) patients, 178,789 (3.31%) patients reported one or more drinks per week | 2013-Current | All facilities at the time of an encounter | Reports show having any value (including 0 alcoholic drinks per week) in social history | Flowsheets, questionnaires, clinical notes | |
| Social history portion of electronic health record during a patient encounter, whether in-person or not in-person encounters (telephone, MyChartd, documentation) | 1,728,749 (32%) patients reported having any value smoking status in social history | 2013-Current | All facilities at the time of an encounter | Smoking quit date is also populated but only in 137,958 (2.6%) of encounterse | Flowsheets, questionnaires, clinical notes | |
aStructured electronic health record data were collected from approximately 5.4 million unique patients between January 1, 2003 and June 26, 2018 and data on alcohol use and smoking status were collected since April 2013.
bThe highest completion rate among other collection methods. The complete list and characteristics of other collection methods are available in Multimedia Appendix 5.
cOther preferred languages were—Arabic: 7317 (0.14%), Chinese/Mandarin: 4036 (0.07%), Korean: 3168 (0.06%), Unknown—a valid value in EHR, different from an empty record: 5936 (0.11%), and no language reported: 2,804,973 (51.93%).
dIntegrated patient portal of the electronic health record system.
eThe status breakdown with collection rate was—current every day smoker: 114,566 (2.12%), current some day smoker: 28,547 (0.53%), former smoker: 297,099 (5.5%), heavy tobacco smoker: 3111 (0.06%), light tobacco smoker: 12,857 (0.24%), never assessed: 302,631 (5.60%), never smoker: 952,636 (17.64%), passive smoke exposure/never smoker: 4274 (0.08%), ever smoked/current status unknown: 1133 (0.02%), and unknown if ever smoked: 11,915 (0.22%).
Number of patients with selected social and behavioral determinant of health (SBDH) domains in electronic health records—using diagnoses-based query and unstructured data.
| SBDH categories and subtypes/codesa | Diagnoses-based query, patient countb | Unstructured, patient countc | |
| 31,628 (0.58) | 30,893 (2.59)d | ||
| Z60.2 problems related to living alone, n | 1222 | —e | |
| Z60.4 social exclusion and rejection, n | 223 | — | |
| Z63.0 relationship problems (with spouse/partner), n | 852 | — | |
| Z63.5 family disruption (separation/divorce), n | 548 | — | |
| Z63.8 other primary support group problems, n | 2230 | — | |
| Z63.9 unspecified primary support group problem, n | 3247 | — | |
| Z65.9 unspecified psychosocial circumstances, n | 938 | — | |
| Z73.4 inadequate social skills, n | 81 | — | |
| Z91.89 other specified personal risk factors, n | 18,947 | — | |
| R45.8 other emotional state symptoms and signs, n | 3340 | — | |
| 10,433 (0.19) | 35,646 (2.99)d | ||
| Z59.0 homelessness, n | 7022 | — | |
| Z59.1 inadequate housing, n | 120 | — | |
| Z59.8 other housing problems, n | 3291 | — | |
| 3543 (0.06) | 11,882 (0.99)d | ||
| Z59.5 extreme poverty, n | 68 | — | |
| Z59.6 low income, n | 72 | — | |
| Z59.7 insufficient social insurance and welfare, n | 46 | — | |
| Z59.8 other economic circumstances problems, n | 3357 | — | |
aPatients with international classification of diseases–revision 9 and 10–coded diagnoses were included in the query.
bStructured electronic health record data were collected from approximately 5.4 million unique patients that contained information captured from January 1, 2003 through June 26, 2018.
cUnstructured data were captured between July 1, 2016 and May 31, 2018. The notes represented 1,188,202 unique patients and 9,066,508 unique encounters.
dNumber of unique patients with at least one note with mentions of the selected social and behavioral domain. Subcategories of social connection/isolation and income/financial resource strains were not studied separately using unstructured data.
eData not available.
Characteristics of electronic health record questionnaires for selected social and behavioral determinant of health domains.
| Questionnaire template | Content area | Administered questionnairesa, completed, n (%) | ||
| Nursing assessment (nb=1,026,988) | Psychological-social relationship | 944,829 (92.00) | ||
| Head-to-toe (n=237,143) | Psychological-social relationship | 92,486 (39.00) | ||
| Nursing 1 (n=217,954) | Psychological-social relationship | 204,877 (94.00) | ||
| Nursing 2 (n=278,084) | Psychological-social relationship | 169,631 (61.00) | ||
| Pediatrics (n=131,134) | Psychological-social relationship | 93,105 (71.00) | ||
| Social work suicide/homicide (n=15,101) | Relationship and social support status | 14,648 (97.00) | ||
| Social work (n=14,481) | Support system’s name and information | 12,743 (88.00) | ||
| Operation room and post anesthesia care unit flowsheet (n=147,694) | Psychological-social relationship | 82,709 (56.00) | ||
| Occupational therapy new home setup (n=131,948) | Social support available at discharge | 47,501 (36.00) | ||
| Obstetrics postpartum assessment (n=135,587) | Recent loss or change in status | 120,672 (89.00) | ||
| Spiritual care interventions (n=116,719) | Spiritual/social network | 68,864 (59.00) | ||
| Pediatrics screening (n=144,659) | Personal-social relationship or socially withdrawn and decreased interaction | 85,349 (59.00) | ||
| Social history; screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (n=2015) | Marital status/need to improve relationships with family/social network and participation in social activities | 1995 (99.00) | ||
| Housing/utility voucher (n=217) | Housing assistance screening and referral | 97 (44.00) | ||
| Abuse/neglect screen (n=12,058) | Homelessness assessment | 11,575 (96.00) | ||
| Social history questionnaire (n=1900) | Screening for assistance with finding housing | 1824 (96.00) | ||
| Emergency department triage abuse indicators and resource planning (n=713,702) | Information on shelter, transportation, and clothing | 39,254 (5.50) | ||
| Chemical dependence unit admission screen (n=15,056) | Homelessness | 2258 (15.00) | ||
| Ambulatory priority access primary care screen (n=1116) | Housing situation | 78 (7.00) | ||
| Adult admission general intake form (n=77,230) | Homelessness | 27030 (35.00) | ||
| Pediatric/newborn general intake form (n=1067) | Homelessness | 587 (55.00) | ||
| Psychiatry social work assessment (n=4913) | Living arrangement | 4422 (90.00) | ||
aRepresents completed questionnaires (count and % of answered questions related to social and behavioral domain of interest). The timeframe for questionnaires was January 1, 2003 to June 26, 2018, with approximately 5.4 million unique patients.
bRepresents total number of questionnaires available on electronic health record.
Figure 1Characteristics of the electronic health record's unstructured data containing social and behavioral determinants of health, stratified by provider role.
Figure 2Characteristics of the electronic health record's unstructured data containing social and behavioral determinants of health, stratified by note type.