Literature DB >> 9929344

Data dictionaries at Giessen University Hospital: past--present--future.

T Bürkle1, H U Prokosch, A Michel, J Dudeck.   

Abstract

The concept of maintaining a medical data dictionary as a HIS core component was fundamental for all HIS development phases since the mid eighties at Giessen University Hospital. Being influenced by an early experimental installation of the HELP hospital information system and its PTXT data dictionary, we kept this approach through a number of development cycles of our own hospital information system. While our first data dictionary implementation (GMDD) was still very close to the PTXT structure (polyhierarchical design with an eight level hierarchy), the second generation dictionary (MDD-GIPHARM) has already been designed using a more flexible semantic network model. GMDD was a mainframe development (realized on Tandem Computers) based on the Tandem Nonstop SQL RDBMS. The major clinical applications established on top of the GMDD were laboratory results review, diagnosis documentation and physician discharge summaries. The MDD-GIPHARM development was initiated on PC-basis as the core of a rheumatology departmental system using MS-Access and then further enhanced within a research project to build knowledge-based functions for drug therapy. A first set of such functions based on MDD-GIPHARM is in routine use since 1996. Our current focus is to enhance MDD-GIPHARM towards an application independent vocabulary server (GDDS), which may be used for a variety of applications with the intranet of Giessen University Hospital. In this paper the evolutionary development of those data dictionary concepts at Giessen University Hospital is illustrated and compared with international activities in the last decade.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9929344      PMCID: PMC2232233     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc AMIA Symp        ISSN: 1531-605X


  7 in total

1.  WING--entering a new phase of electronic data processing at the Giessen University Hospital.

Authors:  H U Prokosch; J Dudeck; G Junghans; K Marquardt; P Sebald; A Michel
Journal:  Methods Inf Med       Date:  1991-10       Impact factor: 2.176

2.  Knowledge based functions for routine use at a German university hospital setting: the issue of fine tuning.

Authors:  T Bürkle; H U Prokosch; G Hussak; J Dudeck
Journal:  Proc AMIA Annu Fall Symp       Date:  1997

3.  The STOR clinical information system.

Authors:  Q E Whiting-O'Keefe; A Whiting; J Henke
Journal:  MD Comput       Date:  1988 Sep-Oct

4.  Knowledge-based approaches to the maintenance of a large controlled medical terminology.

Authors:  J J Cimino; P D Clayton; G Hripcsak; S B Johnson
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  1994 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 4.497

5.  The Unified Medical Language System.

Authors:  D A Lindberg; B L Humphreys; A T McCray
Journal:  Methods Inf Med       Date:  1993-08       Impact factor: 2.176

6.  A web-based architecture for a medical vocabulary server.

Authors:  J H Gennari; D E Oliver; W Pratt; J Rice; M A Musen
Journal:  Proc Annu Symp Comput Appl Med Care       Date:  1995

7.  Managing vocabulary for a centralized clinical system.

Authors:  J J Cimino; S B Johnson; G Hripcsak; C L Hill; P D Clayton
Journal:  Medinfo       Date:  1995
  7 in total
  2 in total

Review 1.  Interface terminologies: facilitating direct entry of clinical data into electronic health record systems.

Authors:  S Trent Rosenbloom; Randolph A Miller; Kevin B Johnson; Peter L Elkin; Steven H Brown
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2006-02-24       Impact factor: 4.497

2.  Using SNOMED CT to represent two interface terminologies.

Authors:  S Trent Rosenbloom; Steven H Brown; David Froehling; Brent A Bauer; Dietlind L Wahner-Roedler; William M Gregg; Peter L Elkin
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2008-10-24       Impact factor: 4.497

  2 in total

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