Literature DB >> 8563309

Creating temporal abstractions in three clinical information systems.

M G Kahn1, K A Marrs.   

Abstract

Modern clinical information system developers recognize the need to associate temporal information with clinical data. However, specific clinical systems capture different temporal features using a variety of data modeling techniques. Two commonly used methods to represent temporal information are point-based events and interval-based durations. We recently implemented a rule-based expert system for drug dose monitoring on three clinical information systems. The expert system requires both static drug dosing information (drug name, amount, route, frequency) and temporal dosing information (duration of therapy, renewals, restarts). Our design goal was to use the same expert system code on all three information systems by defining a common database schema to hide differences in the original systems' data models. Although we have been successful in mapping clinical data from these three source systems into a unified temporal data representation, we describe how differences in handling time within the three clinical systems made this goal difficult to achieve.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 8563309      PMCID: PMC2579121     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Annu Symp Comput Appl Med Care        ISSN: 0195-4210


  5 in total

1.  A modular self-describing clinical databank system.

Authors:  S Weyl; J Fries; G Wiederhold; F Germano
Journal:  Comput Biomed Res       Date:  1975-06

2.  Modeling time in medical decision-support programs.

Authors:  M G Kahn
Journal:  Med Decis Making       Date:  1991 Oct-Dec       Impact factor: 2.583

3.  A temporal query system for protocol-directed decision support.

Authors:  A K Das; M A Musen
Journal:  Methods Inf Med       Date:  1994-10       Impact factor: 2.176

4.  RESUME: a temporal-abstraction system for patient monitoring.

Authors:  Y Shahar; M A Musen
Journal:  Comput Biomed Res       Date:  1993-06

5.  Unifying heterogeneous distributed clinical data in a relational database.

Authors:  K A Marrs; S A Steib; C A Abrams; M G Kahn
Journal:  Proc Annu Symp Comput Appl Med Care       Date:  1993
  5 in total
  2 in total

1.  A formal method to resolve temporal mismatches in clinical databases.

Authors:  A K Das; M A Musen
Journal:  Proc AMIA Symp       Date:  2001

2.  The evaluation of a temporal reasoning system in processing clinical discharge summaries.

Authors:  Li Zhou; Simon Parsons; George Hripcsak
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2007-10-18       Impact factor: 4.497

  2 in total

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