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Title : Digital writing for data capture Title (721)

2012 VHA Employee Innovation Competition. Title : Digital writing for data capture Title (721). Initial Idea Submitted by: Jorge A. Ferrer M.D., M.B.A. http://vacloud.us/groups/5021/. Problem Statement.

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Title : Digital writing for data capture Title (721)

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  1. 2012 VHA Employee Innovation Competition Title: Digital writing for data capture Title (721) Initial Idea Submitted by: Jorge A. Ferrer M.D., M.B.A. http://vacloud.us/groups/5021/

  2. Problem Statement • Clinical documentation has evolved from its original objective of recording what actually was going on with a patient, and what the clinician was actually thinking, to sterile boilerplate documents. • We need to make it simple for the clinician to interact with the record without loosing the richness of the clinical narrative; data entry must be almost as easy as writing. • Perhaps the single greatest challenge that has consistently confronted most clinical system developers is how to engage clinicians in direct data entry in a way that does not disrupt clinician-patient communications.

  3. Description of Idea • The idea is to develop a method for clinical documentation using the most natural, efficient and clinically intuitive methods, with the most comfortable point of care input device. • Allow clinicians to use their preferred method of documentation, to include: writing with digital pens, dictation, voice recognition, and transcription, incorporating Natural Language Processing and Clinical Language Understanding to analyze the data. • The digital & audio ink is converted to text and tagged for analysis. No longer would typing after the fact into CPRS be the only option. All information entered would be accompanied by tags (XML) that would allow the data to be used for other purposes.

  4. Strategic Goals • Impacts Veterans, Clinicians & Staff • Clinical data entry that is easy to learn and desirable by clinicians. • Improves Patient Care & Quality • Improvement in acceptability, thoroughness of documentation, ease of documentation and naturalness of technology feel. • Improves Patient Safety • Improve accuracy of clinical data entry • Improves Efficiency • Faster more accurate documentation, improved clinical workflow, improved timely distribution of data/information. • Improve green initiatives • Reduced scanning, faxing, copying and processing of paper forms • Improves unmet need • Can capture coded narrative notes for clinical care & research

  5. Success Metrics • Functional Prototype Success Metric • Clinicians will be able to view semantically coded text-based new progress notes in desired format, including hand written drawings with content captured by digital pens in a test environment. Clinicians can be mobile and gather any data they choose, using their own pre-existing forms. We will evaluate the application’s usability and ability to support accurate documentation via a set of sample forms of variable complexity. • Expected Results • Reduce the time to document a new progress note by entering data once, not re-entering data after the encounter from ordinary paper to CPRS. Avoid duplicative work such as taking notes while the clinician is with the patients and then transferring by hand to CPRS. Eliminate the need to have documents manually scanned in CPRS. Improve accuracy and completeness of data entry

  6. Impacts • Veterans • Will have improved clinical documentation “telling their story” • Will experience better communication with their clinicians • VA Clinicians & Staff • Will spend less time documenting clinical care • Will be mobile while documenting clinical care • Will be able to treat more patients as a result of reduced data capture & re-entry of data • Will be able to capture their clinical thoughts intuitively • Additional support needed • Coordination with OIT to ensure digital pens and connectivity can support clinical documentation requirements

  7. Approach • Our approach involves data capture, creating user-designed progress note forms for the digital pen to access the Computer Patient Record System (CPRS) & VistA Imaging • We will test a data integration and data transformation & message broker that will receive the unstructured data using medical terminology and ontology services. • Once the data has been structured into the correct HL7 format it will be routed to a VistA integration service. The VistA integration service will consume the HL7 message data and integrate the data via web services or VistA remote procedure calls. • Data security will be accomplished by using VA standard VPN clients for the chosen platform. Authentication and single sign on capabilities will be extended from current VistA.

  8. Team and Environment • We have created a strong team with VHA and advisory team: Dr. Ferrer, medical informaticist for this project. • A HITIDE initiative within the VA portfolio • Health Information Technology Innovation and Development Environments (HITIDE): A Model for Health Information Technology Innovation • HITIDE represents an “active innovation ecosystem that fosters collaboration of federal and private partners health IT-electronic health record innovations”. • http://www.nitrd.gov/nitrdgroups/index.php?title=Health_IT_R%26D_SSG/Health_Information_Technology_Innovation_and_Development_Environments_Subgroup_(HITIDE)#title

  9. Implementation • Requirements will be gathered from VA clinicians & staff • Workflow analysis of the progress note clinical documentation process will be completed • User testing will occur with a volunteer group of clinicians and staff • Digital writing with pens will be rolled out to the volunteer group of providers and the performance of the point of care clinical documentation digital pens will be assessed

  10. Challenges & Risks • Risk: If the innovation proceeds beyond proof of concept to use in actual patient care, Veterans’ personally identifiable information (PII) will need to be HIPAA compliant when the digital writing pen-smartforms is used. • Solution: Use only digital writing pen-smartforms technology defined as an EHR Modules that have been tested and certified under the Certification Program maintained by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC). • Challenge: Clinicians may not embrace the digital pen technology • Solution: Educate clinicians on the ease of use of digital writing pen- smartforms creation and use of the digital writing pen solution.

  11. What Do You Really think? • The clinical narrative must never be lost. If the full clinical narrative never comes into existence, the knowledge discovery cycle is broken and the discoveries of medicine are threatened. • The strong team of informatics and Tampa VAMC are well poised to succeed with a proven track record of current innovations. • We will be successful when clinicians can document their thoughts freely and we provide the tools necessary to improve their performance. • “Observe, record, tabulate, communicate. Use your five senses. Learn to see, learn to hear, learn to feel, learn to smell, and know that by practice alone you can become expert.” (William Osler MD) • “There is no more difficult art to acquire than the art of observation, and for some men it is quite as difficult to record an observation in brief and plain language.” (William Osler MD)

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