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1.
Procedia Comput Sci ; 219: 1453-1461, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36968662

ABSTRACT

Brazil is one of the countries with the worst response against the pandemic scenario of coronavírus. At the beginning we were on average with 4000 deaths in a 24 hours period. In the course of this situation, large amounts of health and medicine datasets were being generated in real time, requiring effective ways to extract information and discover patterns that can help in the fight against this disease. And even more important is to monitor the progress of prophylactic measures and whether they are being effective in reducing the spread of the virus. Thus, the aim of this study is to analyze how the coronavirus has different ways to evolve in each Brazilian state with the influences of the vaccination process. To achieve this goal, the time series Clustering Technique based on a K-Means variation was applied, with the similarity metric Dynamic Time Warping (DTW). We produced this study using the data reported by the Ministry of Health in Brazil, referring to deaths per 100k inhabitants and all vaccination data available. Our results indicate an unevenly occurring vaccination and the need to identify other associated patterns with human development indices and other socio-economic indicators, being this the first analysis developed in the country, under the goals above.

2.
Rev Soc Bras Med Trop ; 53: e20200550, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33111917

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Five months after the first confirmed case of COVID-19 in Brazil, the country has the second highest number of cases in the world. Without any scientifically proven drug or vaccine available combined with COVID-19's high transmissivity, slowing down the spread of the infection is a challenge. In an attempt to save the economy, the Brazilian government is slowly beginning to allow non-essential services to reopen for in-person customers. METHODS: In this study, we analyze, based on data analysis and statistics, how other countries evolve and under which conditions they decided to resume normal activity. In addition, due to the heterogeneity of Brazil, we explore Brazilian data of COVID-19 from the State Health Secretaries to evaluate the situation of the pandemic within the states. RESULTS: Results show that while other countries have flattened their curves and present low numbers of active cases, Brazil continues to see an increase in COVID-19 patients. Furthermore, a number of important states are easing restrictions despite a high percentage of confirmed cases. CONCLUSIONS: All analyses show that Brazil is not ready for reopening, and the premature easing of restrictions may increase the number of COVID-19-related deaths and cause the collapse of the public health system.


Subject(s)
Betacoronavirus , Coronavirus Infections , Pandemics , Pneumonia, Viral , Brazil/epidemiology , COVID-19 , Humans , SARS-CoV-2
3.
Rev. Soc. Bras. Med. Trop ; 53: e20200550, 2020. graf
Article in English | Sec. Est. Saúde SP, Coleciona SUS, LILACS | ID: biblio-1136845

ABSTRACT

Abstract INTRODUCTION Five months after the first confirmed case of COVID-19 in Brazil, the country has the second highest number of cases in the world. Without any scientifically proven drug or vaccine available combined with COVID-19's high transmissivity, slowing down the spread of the infection is a challenge. In an attempt to save the economy, the Brazilian government is slowly beginning to allow non-essential services to reopen for in-person customers. METHODS: In this study, we analyze, based on data analysis and statistics, how other countries evolve and under which conditions they decided to resume normal activity. In addition, due to the heterogeneity of Brazil, we explore Brazilian data of COVID-19 from the State Health Secretaries to evaluate the situation of the pandemic within the states. RESULTS: Results show that while other countries have flattened their curves and present low numbers of active cases, Brazil continues to see an increase in COVID-19 patients. Furthermore, a number of important states are easing restrictions despite a high percentage of confirmed cases. CONCLUSIONS: All analyses show that Brazil is not ready for reopening, and the premature easing of restrictions may increase the number of COVID-19-related deaths and cause the collapse of the public health system.


Subject(s)
Humans , Pneumonia, Viral , Coronavirus Infections , Pandemics , Betacoronavirus , Brazil/epidemiology
4.
JMIR Ment Health ; 5(4): e10129, 2018 Dec 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30530455

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The electronic exchange of health-related data can support different professionals and services to act in a more coordinated and transparent manner and make the management of health service networks more efficient. Although mental health care is one of the areas that can benefit from a secure health information exchange (HIE), as it usually involves long-term and multiprofessional care, there are few published studies on this topic, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to design, implement, and evaluate an electronic health (eHealth) platform that allows the technical and informational support of a Brazilian regional network of mental health care. This solution was to enable HIE, improve data quality, and identify and monitor patients over time and in different services. METHODS: The proposed platform is based on client-server architecture to be deployed on the Web following a Web services communication model. The interoperability information model was based on international and Brazilian health standards. To test platform usage, we have utilized the case of the mental health care network of the XIII Regional Health Department of the São Paulo state, Brazil. Data were extracted from 5 different sources, involving 26 municipalities, and included national demographic data, data from primary health care, data from requests for psychiatric hospitalizations performed by community services, and data obtained from 2 psychiatric hospitals about hospitalizations. Data quality metrics such as accuracy and completeness were evaluated to test the proposed solution. RESULTS: The eHealth-Interop integration platform was designed, developed, and tested. It contains a built-in terminology server and a record linkage module to support patients' identification and deduplication. The proposed interoperability environment was able to integrate information in the mental health care network case with the support of 5 international and national terminologies. In total, 27,353 records containing demographic and clinical data were integrated into eHealth-Interop. Of these records, 34.91% (9548/27,353) were identified as patients who were present in more than 1 data source with different levels of accuracy and completeness. The data quality analysis was performed on 26 demographic attributes for each integrable patient record, totaling 248,248 comparisons. In general, it was possible to achieve an improvement of 18.40% (45,678/248,248) in completeness and 1.10% (2731/248,248) in syntactic accuracy over the test dataset after integration and deduplication. CONCLUSIONS: The proposed platform established an eHealth solution to fill the gap in the availability and quality of information within a network of health services to improve the continuity of care and the health services management. It has been successfully applied in the context of mental health care and is flexible to be tested in other areas of care.

5.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28053659

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Regional networking between services that provide mental health care in Brazil's decentralized public health system is challenging, partly due to the simultaneous existence of services managed by municipal and state authorities and a lack of efficient and transparent mechanisms for continuous and updated communication between them. Since 2011, the Ribeirao Preto Medical School and the XIII Regional Health Department of the Sao Paulo state, Brazil, have been developing and implementing a web-based information system to facilitate an integrated care throughout a public regional mental health care network. CASE PRESENTATION: After a profound on-site analysis, the structure of the network was identified and a web-based information system for psychiatric admissions and discharges was developed and implemented using a socio-technical approach. An information technology team liaised with mental health professionals, health-service managers, municipal and state health secretariats and judicial authorities. Primary care, specialized community services, general emergency and psychiatric wards services, that comprise the regional mental healthcare network, were identified and the system flow was delineated. The web-based system overcame the fragmentation of the healthcare system and addressed service specific needs, enabling: detailed patient information sharing; active coordination of the processes of psychiatric admissions and discharges; real-time monitoring; the patients' status reports; the evaluation of the performance of each service and the whole network. During a 2-year period of operation, it registered 137 services, 480 health care professionals and 4271 patients, with a mean number of 2835 accesses per month. To date the system is successfully operating and further expanding. CONCLUSION: We have successfully developed and implemented an acceptable, useful and transparent web-based information system for a regional mental healthcare service network in a medium-income country with a decentralized public health system. Systematic collaboration between an information technology team and a wide range of stakeholders is essential for the system development and implementation.

6.
Comput Biol Med ; 84: 254-261, 2017 05 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25959800

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Researchers of translational medicine face numerous challenges in attempting to bring research results to the bedside. This field of research covers a wide range of resources, including blood and tissue samples, which are processed for isolation of RNA and DNA to study cancer omics data (genomics, proteomics and metabolomics). Clinical information about patients׳ habits, family history, physical examinations, remissions, etc., is also important to underpin studies aimed at identifying patterns that lead to the development of cancer and to its successful treatment. PURPOSE: Development of a web-based computer system-BioBankWarden-to manage, consolidate and integrate these diversified data, enabling cancer research groups to retrieve and analyze clinical and biomolecular data within an integrative environment. The system has a three-tier architecture comprising database, logic and user-interface layers. RESULTS: The system׳s integrated database and user-friendly interface allow for the control of patient records, biomaterial storage, research groups, research projects, users and biomaterial exchange. CONCLUSIONS: BioBankWarden can be used to store and retrieve specific information from different clinical fields linked to biomaterials collected from patients, providing the functionalities required to support translational research in the field of cancer.


Subject(s)
Database Management Systems , Databases, Factual , Internet , Neoplasms , Translational Research, Biomedical/methods , Computational Biology , Electronic Health Records , Humans , Neoplasms/genetics , Neoplasms/metabolism , Neoplasms/pathology , User-Computer Interface
7.
J. health inform ; 8(supl.I): 107-116, 2016. ilus
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: biblio-906182

ABSTRACT

A padronização dos Registros Eletrônicos em Saúde (RES) tem sido amplamente requerida desde de sua regulamentação pelo Ministério da Saúde. Neste contexto, o modelo de referência openEHR foi definido para a padronização dosRES. OBJETIVO: Avaliar a viabilidade de uma aplicação RESTful utilizando o openEHR (cwOpenEhr RestApi). MÉTODOS: O tempo de Requisição-Resposta (TRR) do cwOpenEhrRestApi foi comparado com uma aplicação que não utiliza REST e com um tempo máximo aceitável por um usuário (15 segundos). RESULTADOS: Há indicação de que o TRR do cwOpenEhrRestApifoi menor do que o tempo máximo aceitável. Além disso, o TRR foi diferente ao de uma aplicação que não utilizou RESTful. CONCLUSÃO: A utilização de RESTful com openEHR foi considerada viável, uma vez que, embora exista uma diferença estatisticamente significativa do TRR com relação à abordagem sem RESTful, o TRR do cwOpenEhrRestApi foi significativamente menor que o tempo máximo aceitável por um usuário.


Standardize Electronic Health Records (EHR) has been widely required since its regulation by the Brazilian Ministry of Health. In this context, openEHR's reference model has been defined to standardize the EHR. OBJECTIVE: Evaluate the feasibility of a RESTful openEHR solution (cwOpenEhrRestApi). METHODS: The Request-Response Time(RRT) of cwOpenEhrRestApi was compared to an application that does not use RESTful and to a maximum acceptable time for a user (15 seconds). RESULTS: There is an indication that the RRT of cwOpenEhrRestApi was lower than the maximum acceptable time. Furthermore, the time was different to a non-based RESTful application. CONCLUSION: The use ofRESTful with openEHR was considered feasible, since, despite the fact that there is a statistically significant differenceregarding the non-based RESTFul RRT, the RRT of cwOpenEhrRestApi was significantly lower than the maximum acceptabletime for a user.


Subject(s)
Humans , Use of Scientific Information for Health Decision Making , Electronic Health Records , Electronic Data Processing , Congresses as Topic
8.
BMC Bioinformatics ; 14: 180, 2013 Jun 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23742129

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The use of the knowledge produced by sciences to promote human health is the main goal of translational medicine. To make it feasible we need computational methods to handle the large amount of information that arises from bench to bedside and to deal with its heterogeneity. A computational challenge that must be faced is to promote the integration of clinical, socio-demographic and biological data. In this effort, ontologies play an essential role as a powerful artifact for knowledge representation. Chado is a modular ontology-oriented database model that gained popularity due to its robustness and flexibility as a generic platform to store biological data; however it lacks supporting representation of clinical and socio-demographic information. RESULTS: We have implemented an extension of Chado - the Clinical Module - to allow the representation of this kind of information. Our approach consists of a framework for data integration through the use of a common reference ontology. The design of this framework has four levels: data level, to store the data; semantic level, to integrate and standardize the data by the use of ontologies; application level, to manage clinical databases, ontologies and data integration process; and web interface level, to allow interaction between the user and the system. The clinical module was built based on the Entity-Attribute-Value (EAV) model. We also proposed a methodology to migrate data from legacy clinical databases to the integrative framework. A Chado instance was initialized using a relational database management system. The Clinical Module was implemented and the framework was loaded using data from a factual clinical research database. Clinical and demographic data as well as biomaterial data were obtained from patients with tumors of head and neck. We implemented the IPTrans tool that is a complete environment for data migration, which comprises: the construction of a model to describe the legacy clinical data, based on an ontology; the Extraction, Transformation and Load (ETL) process to extract the data from the source clinical database and load it in the Clinical Module of Chado; the development of a web tool and a Bridge Layer to adapt the web tool to Chado, as well as other applications. CONCLUSIONS: Open-source computational solutions currently available for translational science does not have a model to represent biomolecular information and also are not integrated with the existing bioinformatics tools. On the other hand, existing genomic data models do not represent clinical patient data. A framework was developed to support translational research by integrating biomolecular information coming from different "omics" technologies with patient's clinical and socio-demographic data. This framework should present some features: flexibility, compression and robustness. The experiments accomplished from a use case demonstrated that the proposed system meets requirements of flexibility and robustness, leading to the desired integration. The Clinical Module can be accessed in http://dcm.ffclrp.usp.br/caib/pg=iptrans.


Subject(s)
Biomedical Research , Translational Research, Biomedical/methods , Carcinoma/genetics , Carcinoma/therapy , Computational Biology/methods , Databases, Factual , Genome, Human , Genomics , Head and Neck Neoplasms/genetics , Head and Neck Neoplasms/therapy , Humans , Software
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