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1.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 180: 529-33, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22874247

ABSTRACT

Interoperability and reuse of healthcare information, for patient care and clinical research, rely on standardised approaches in its representation. The medical domain is rich with terminologies and dictionaries to support the representation of clinical data, but these are not necessarily interoperable. Secondary care research has long been conducted with study-specific requirements, and the valuable information collected was, however, difficult to reuse and share due to incomplete data collection and its non-standard representation. As a way to resolve some of these issues, we are designing and building sustainable database applications that clinicians and researchers alike can use as research registries, with the main aim to have research-quality healthcare information for future research studies and trials. This paper looks at a case study of how these applications are being developed in Central England through the use of controlled vocabularies. Specialty teams are keen to improve the interoperability, sharing and reuse of health information within and across specialties.


Subject(s)
Electronic Health Records/standards , Health Records, Personal , Health Services Research/standards , Information Systems/standards , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Secondary Care/standards , Terminology as Topic , England
2.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 180: 519-23, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22874245

ABSTRACT

Heterogeneous data models and coding schemes for electronic health records present challenges for automated search across distributed data sources. This paper describes a loosely coupled software framework based on the terminology controlled approach to enable the interoperation between the search interface and heterogeneous data sources. Software components interoperate via common terminology service and abstract criteria model so as to promote component reuse and incremental system evolution.


Subject(s)
Database Management Systems , Electronic Health Records , Health Records, Personal , Internet , Patient Identification Systems/methods , Search Engine , Software , Cohort Studies , Internationality , Natural Language Processing , User-Computer Interface
3.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22779039

ABSTRACT

In the United Kingdom (UK), local initiatives have started to federate electronic healthcare records from different primary care clinical systems, mainly for the purposes of ensuring that health care services effectively meet the needs of the population. The use of such information is being investigated for clinical research, notably in patient cohort identification and recruitment. To achieve these aims, it is essential that the information from different systems can be searched from a single interface. While interoperability is a widely researched topic, interoperable methods and data sources in primary care are largely missing. This paper describes our approach to enabling primary care data in England to be searchable on a platform developed for performing large national collaborative primary care research studies throughout the United States.

4.
Buenos Aires; Panamericana; 1963. 333 p. (110354).
Monography in Spanish | BINACIS | ID: bin-110354
5.
Buenos Aires; Panamericana; 1963. 333 p. ilus.
Monography in Spanish | LILACS-Express | BINACIS | ID: biblio-1211031
6.
Buenos Aires; Panamericana; 1963. 333 p. ilus. (104569).
Monography in Spanish | BINACIS | ID: bin-104569
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