Building a Shared, Scalable, and Sustainable Source for the Problem-Oriented Medical Record: Developmental Study

BackgroundSince the creation of the problem-oriented medical record, the building of problem lists has been the focus of many studies. To date, this issue is not well resolved, and building an appropriate contextualized problem list is still a challenge. Objective...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Christophe Gaudet-Blavignac, Andrea Rudaz, Christian Lovis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2021-10-01
Series:JMIR Medical Informatics
Online Access:https://medinform.jmir.org/2021/10/e29174
_version_ 1797735705736118272
author Christophe Gaudet-Blavignac
Andrea Rudaz
Christian Lovis
author_facet Christophe Gaudet-Blavignac
Andrea Rudaz
Christian Lovis
author_sort Christophe Gaudet-Blavignac
collection DOAJ
description BackgroundSince the creation of the problem-oriented medical record, the building of problem lists has been the focus of many studies. To date, this issue is not well resolved, and building an appropriate contextualized problem list is still a challenge. ObjectiveThis paper aims to present the process of building a shared multipurpose common problem list at the Geneva University Hospitals. This list aims to bridge the gap between clinicians’ language expressed in free text and secondary uses requiring structured information. MethodsWe focused on the needs of clinicians by building a list of uniquely identified expressions to support their daily activities. In the second stage, these expressions were connected to additional information to build a complex graph of information. A list of 45,946 expressions manually extracted from clinical documents was manually curated and encoded in multiple semantic dimensions, such as International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision; International Classification of Primary Care 2nd edition; Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine Clinical Terms; or dimensions dictated by specific usages, such as identifying expressions specific to a domain, a gender, or an intervention. The list was progressively deployed for clinicians with an iterative process of quality control, maintenance, and improvements, including the addition of new expressions or dimensions for specific needs. The problem management of the electronic health record allowed the measurement and correction of encoding based on real-world use. ResultsThe list was deployed in production in January 2017 and was regularly updated and deployed in new divisions of the hospital. Over 4 years, 684,102 problems were created using the list. The proportion of free-text entries decreased progressively from 37.47% (8321/22,206) in December 2017 to 18.38% (4547/24,738) in December 2020. In the last version of the list, over 14 dimensions were mapped to expressions, among which 5 were international classifications and 8 were other classifications for specific uses. The list became a central axis in the electronic health record, being used for many different purposes linked to care, such as surgical planning or emergency wards, or in research, for various predictions using machine learning techniques. ConclusionsThis study breaks with common approaches primarily by focusing on real clinicians’ language when expressing patients’ problems and secondarily by mapping whatever is required, including controlled vocabularies to answer specific needs. This approach improves the quality of the expression of patients’ problems while allowing the building of as many structured dimensions as needed to convey semantics according to specific contexts. The method is shown to be scalable, sustainable, and efficient at hiding the complexity of semantics or the burden of constraint-structured problem list entry for clinicians. Ongoing work is analyzing the impact of this approach on how clinicians express patients’ problems.
first_indexed 2024-03-12T13:01:58Z
format Article
id doaj.art-f36456f37c5f4e7fa080595e007e3a2e
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2291-9694
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-12T13:01:58Z
publishDate 2021-10-01
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format Article
series JMIR Medical Informatics
spelling doaj.art-f36456f37c5f4e7fa080595e007e3a2e2023-08-28T19:31:24ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Medical Informatics2291-96942021-10-01910e2917410.2196/29174Building a Shared, Scalable, and Sustainable Source for the Problem-Oriented Medical Record: Developmental StudyChristophe Gaudet-Blavignachttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-6527-5898Andrea Rudazhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-9853-8201Christian Lovishttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-2681-8076 BackgroundSince the creation of the problem-oriented medical record, the building of problem lists has been the focus of many studies. To date, this issue is not well resolved, and building an appropriate contextualized problem list is still a challenge. ObjectiveThis paper aims to present the process of building a shared multipurpose common problem list at the Geneva University Hospitals. This list aims to bridge the gap between clinicians’ language expressed in free text and secondary uses requiring structured information. MethodsWe focused on the needs of clinicians by building a list of uniquely identified expressions to support their daily activities. In the second stage, these expressions were connected to additional information to build a complex graph of information. A list of 45,946 expressions manually extracted from clinical documents was manually curated and encoded in multiple semantic dimensions, such as International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision; International Classification of Primary Care 2nd edition; Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine Clinical Terms; or dimensions dictated by specific usages, such as identifying expressions specific to a domain, a gender, or an intervention. The list was progressively deployed for clinicians with an iterative process of quality control, maintenance, and improvements, including the addition of new expressions or dimensions for specific needs. The problem management of the electronic health record allowed the measurement and correction of encoding based on real-world use. ResultsThe list was deployed in production in January 2017 and was regularly updated and deployed in new divisions of the hospital. Over 4 years, 684,102 problems were created using the list. The proportion of free-text entries decreased progressively from 37.47% (8321/22,206) in December 2017 to 18.38% (4547/24,738) in December 2020. In the last version of the list, over 14 dimensions were mapped to expressions, among which 5 were international classifications and 8 were other classifications for specific uses. The list became a central axis in the electronic health record, being used for many different purposes linked to care, such as surgical planning or emergency wards, or in research, for various predictions using machine learning techniques. ConclusionsThis study breaks with common approaches primarily by focusing on real clinicians’ language when expressing patients’ problems and secondarily by mapping whatever is required, including controlled vocabularies to answer specific needs. This approach improves the quality of the expression of patients’ problems while allowing the building of as many structured dimensions as needed to convey semantics according to specific contexts. The method is shown to be scalable, sustainable, and efficient at hiding the complexity of semantics or the burden of constraint-structured problem list entry for clinicians. Ongoing work is analyzing the impact of this approach on how clinicians express patients’ problems.https://medinform.jmir.org/2021/10/e29174
spellingShingle Christophe Gaudet-Blavignac
Andrea Rudaz
Christian Lovis
Building a Shared, Scalable, and Sustainable Source for the Problem-Oriented Medical Record: Developmental Study
JMIR Medical Informatics
title Building a Shared, Scalable, and Sustainable Source for the Problem-Oriented Medical Record: Developmental Study
title_full Building a Shared, Scalable, and Sustainable Source for the Problem-Oriented Medical Record: Developmental Study
title_fullStr Building a Shared, Scalable, and Sustainable Source for the Problem-Oriented Medical Record: Developmental Study
title_full_unstemmed Building a Shared, Scalable, and Sustainable Source for the Problem-Oriented Medical Record: Developmental Study
title_short Building a Shared, Scalable, and Sustainable Source for the Problem-Oriented Medical Record: Developmental Study
title_sort building a shared scalable and sustainable source for the problem oriented medical record developmental study
url https://medinform.jmir.org/2021/10/e29174
work_keys_str_mv AT christophegaudetblavignac buildingasharedscalableandsustainablesourcefortheproblemorientedmedicalrecorddevelopmentalstudy
AT andrearudaz buildingasharedscalableandsustainablesourcefortheproblemorientedmedicalrecorddevelopmentalstudy
AT christianlovis buildingasharedscalableandsustainablesourcefortheproblemorientedmedicalrecorddevelopmentalstudy