| Literature DB >> 8130474 |
N Sager1, M Lyman, L J Tick, N T Nhàn, C E Bucknall.
Abstract
A technique for monitoring healthcare via the processing of routinely collected narrative documentation is presented. A checklist of important details of asthma management in use in the Glasgow Royal Infirmary (GRI) was translated into SQL queries and applied to a database of 59 GRI discharge summaries analyzed by the New York University Linguistic String Project medical language processor. Tables of retrieved information obtained for each query were compared with the text of the original documents by physician reviewers. Categories (unit = document) were: (1) information present, retrieved correctly; (2) information not present; (3) information present, retrieved with minor or major error; (4) information present, retrieved with minor or major omissions. Category 2 (physician "documentation score") could be used to prioritize manual review and guide feedback to physicians to improve documentation. The semantic structuring and relative completeness of retrieved data suggest their potential use as input to further quality assurance procedures.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1993 PMID: 8130474 PMCID: PMC2248515
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Annu Symp Comput Appl Med Care ISSN: 0195-4210