Towards interoperable digital medication records on FHIR: development and technical validation of a minimal core dataset.

IF 3.1 3区 医学 Q2 MEDICAL INFORMATICS
Eduardo Salgado-Baez, Raphael Heidepriem, Renate Delucchi Danhier, Eugenia Rinaldi, Vishnu Ravi, Akira-Sebastian Poncette, Iris Dahlhaus, Daniel Fürstenau, Felix Balzer, Sylvia Thun, Julian Sass
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Medication errors represent a widespread, hazardous, and costly challenge in healthcare settings. The lack of interoperable medication data within and across hospitals not only creates administrative burden through redundant data entry but also increases the risk of errors due to human mistakes, imprecise data transformations, and misinterpretations. While digital solutions exist, fragmented systems and non-standardized data continue to hinder effective medication management.

Objective: This study aimed to assess medication data available across the multiple systems of a large university hospital, identify a minimum data set with the most relevant information and propose a standard interoperable FHIR-based solution that can import and transfer information from a standardized drug master database to various target systems.

Methods: Medication data from all relevant departments of a large German hospital were thoroughly analyzed. To ensure interoperability, data elements for developing a minimum dataset were defined based on relevant medication identifiers, the Health Level 7 Fast Health Interoperability Resources (HL7® FHIR®) standard, and the German Medical Informatics Initiative (MII) specifications. The dataset was further enriched with information from Germany's most comprehensive drug database and European Standard Drug Terms (EDQM) to enhance medication identification accuracy. Finally, data on 60 frequently used medications within the institution was systematically extracted from multiple medication systems and integrated into a newly structured, dedicated database.

Results: The analysis of all the available medication datasets within the institution identified 7,964 drugs. However, limited interoperability was observed due to a fragmented local IT infrastructure and challenges in medication data standardization. Data integrated and available in the new structured medication dataset with key elements to ensure data identification accuracy and interoperability, successfully enabled the generation of medication order messages, ensuring medication interoperability and standardized data exchange.

Conclusions: Our approach addresses the lack of interoperability in medication data and the need for standardized data exchange. We propose a minimum set of data elements aligned with German and international coding systems, to be used in combination with the FHIR standard for processes such as the digital transfer of discharge medication prescriptions from intensive care units to general wards, which can help to reduce medication errors and enhance patient safety.

迈向可互操作的FHIR数字医疗记录:最小核心数据集的开发和技术验证。
背景:在医疗环境中,用药错误是一个广泛的、危险的、代价高昂的挑战。医院内部和医院之间缺乏可互操作的药物数据,不仅会通过冗余的数据输入造成管理负担,还会增加由于人为错误、不精确的数据转换和误解而导致的错误风险。虽然存在数字解决方案,但分散的系统和非标准化数据继续阻碍有效的药物管理。目的:本研究旨在评估一家大型大学医院的多个系统中可用的药物数据,确定具有最相关信息的最小数据集,并提出一个标准的可互操作的基于fhr的解决方案,该解决方案可以从标准化的药物主数据库导入和传输信息到各个目标系统。方法:对德国某大型医院各相关科室的用药资料进行全面分析。为了确保互操作性,用于开发最小数据集的数据元素是基于相关药物标识符、健康级别7快速健康互操作性资源(HL7®FHIR®)标准和德国医学信息学倡议(MII)规范定义的。该数据集进一步丰富了来自德国最全面的药物数据库和欧洲标准药物术语(EDQM)的信息,以提高药物识别的准确性。最后,从多个用药系统中系统地提取了该机构内60种常用药物的数据,并将其整合到一个新构建的专用数据库中。结果:分析了该机构所有可用的药物数据集,确定了7,964种药物。然而,由于分散的本地IT基础设施和药物数据标准化方面的挑战,观察到互操作性有限。数据集成和可用在新的结构化药物数据集中,关键元素确保数据识别的准确性和互操作性,成功地实现了药物订单信息的生成,确保了药物互操作性和标准化的数据交换。结论:我们的方法解决了药物数据缺乏互操作性和标准化数据交换的需求。我们提出了一套与德国和国际编码系统相一致的最小数据元素集,与FHIR标准结合使用,用于从重症监护病房到普通病房的出院药物处方的数字传输等流程,这有助于减少用药错误并提高患者安全。
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来源期刊
JMIR Medical Informatics
JMIR Medical Informatics Medicine-Health Informatics
CiteScore
7.90
自引率
3.10%
发文量
173
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: JMIR Medical Informatics (JMI, ISSN 2291-9694) is a top-rated, tier A journal which focuses on clinical informatics, big data in health and health care, decision support for health professionals, electronic health records, ehealth infrastructures and implementation. It has a focus on applied, translational research, with a broad readership including clinicians, CIOs, engineers, industry and health informatics professionals. Published by JMIR Publications, publisher of the Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR), the leading eHealth/mHealth journal (Impact Factor 2016: 5.175), JMIR Med Inform has a slightly different scope (emphasizing more on applications for clinicians and health professionals rather than consumers/citizens, which is the focus of JMIR), publishes even faster, and also allows papers which are more technical or more formative than what would be published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research.
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