1 / 48

The Evolution of EMS Data

The Evolution of EMS Data. Michael Schnyder NEMSIS Technical Assistance Center. Overview. The purpose of this presentation is to provide you with an opportunity to learn more about EMS data systems and ask me questions Pre-NEMSIS NEMSIS Pilot Project Where we stand today

gelb
Download Presentation

The Evolution of EMS Data

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Evolution of EMS Data Michael Schnyder NEMSIS Technical Assistance Center

  2. Overview • The purpose of this presentation is to provide you with an opportunity to learn more about EMS data systems and ask me questions • Pre-NEMSIS • NEMSIS • Pilot Project • Where we stand today • What’s next for EMS Data

  3. History of EMS Data • We can date it back to the “modern age of EMS” • 1966: Accidental Death and Disability “A review of ambulance services in the United States indicates a paucity of information and a limited framework for the collection of data on and the evaluation of current ambulance services.” (Page 13)

  4. So What Happened Between Then and Now? • Largest event happened in 1992-1993 • The NHTSA EMS Data Elements Version 1 • Great try, the spirit was there • Too loose of a standard • EMS relatively uneducated to the potential of computer technology • States went on their own • The NEMSIS Project

  5. Status: United States Source: NEMSIS TAC

  6. The NEMSIS Project • Late 90’s, the National Association of State EMS Directors decided there was a NEED for uniform data collection • EMS Education • Curriculums • Local Education • EMS Outcomes • Something other than death • System evaluation

  7. The Need • EMS Research • Generate hypothesis • Evaluate cost-effectiveness • Identify problems and target issues • EMS Reimbursement • National fee schedule and reimbursement rates

  8. The Original Team • NASEMSD • Project Management, Regional Meetings Operational Support • Greg Mears, MD (Principal Investigator) • NEDARC • Clay Mann, PhD, Co-Investigator • Mike Dean, MD, Co-Investigator • Technical Assistance • State Data-Managers

  9. The Money • NHTSA • EMS Division (Primary) • HRSA • EMS-C, Trauma, and EMS • American Heart Association • Support for EMS Software Development

  10. Professional Organizations AAA AAMS ACEP ACS-COT (NTDB) AHA (NRCPR) EMSOP IAFC IAFF NAEMD NAEMSP NAEMT NASEMSD NENA Federal Partners CDC FEMA HRSA-EMSC HRSA-EMSC/NEDARC HRSA-EMSC/NRC HRSA-ORHP HRSA-Trauma/EMS NHTSA The Consensus

  11. This Desire… • Turned into the revision of the National EMS Dataset • More than just a dictionary • Why each element exists • The use and purpose of each element • How to store and send the data • How they interact with each other

  12. NEMSIS Overview • Composed of two components: • Demographic dataset: • Standardized set of data fields that describe an EMS system • EMS dataset: • Standardized set of definitions describing an EMS event

  13. NEMSIS Overview • Both have the following: • XML (eXtensible Markup Language ) formats • XSD (XML Schema Definition) • Provides the capability of moving data from one system to another • XML provides the method on which data is stored • XSD provides the definition and rules for a field

  14. NEMSIS Overview • Date of Birth • You don’t want to have people enter any data into the field. • You need them to: • Complete the field • Format: MM/DD/YYYY • Range: Today’s date to 125 years ago

  15. DOB Dictionary View

  16. NEMSIS Overview Number of fields to be collected: Total Package Local States/Regions set the minimum number of fields State Nat’l State Data Dictionary List in current dictionary

  17. Portability! • Portability means: • Ease of movement of the data • Commonality of the elements to be moved • Software vendors developing applications that can be used across the country

  18. Questions So Far?

  19. NEMSIS TAC • The TAC picked up the work at the end of the Pilot phase of NEMSIS (Sept 2005) • University of Utah received the grant • Utah contracted with University of North Carolina to continue their efforts • The Goal is to collect data from States and Territories to create the National EMS Database

  20. NEMSIS TAC • Simple goal, complicated objectives • This means that the TAC will be offering assistance to: • States • Local EMS agencies • Software developers

  21. NEMSIS TAC Resources • www.nemsis.org • Reference Documents • Communication and Public Education • Maintain Dataset and XSD • Development Tools • Direct Technical Assistance • National Database Development • Other

  22. www.NEMSIS.org

  23. Software Compliancy • On March 1, 2006, the TAC began testing software developers for compliance • There are two levels of compliance: • Gold • Silver

  24. Silver Must have the National elements Any additional elements must comply with the standard Must create the right XML/XSD files Gold Must be able to offer all of the elements found in the NHTSA dataset Must create the right XML/XSD files Silver and Gold Compliance

  25. Compliance • Upon successful completion of the compliance certification, the developer and application will be posted on the NEMSIS site • Always remember to be an informed customer (There is the possibility of cheating the certification process)

  26. Compliance So Far • With held three testing sessions in 2006 • 24 software applications were tested • 18 successfully passed the process • 9 Gold-level and 9 Silver-level products • Three testing sessions for 2007 • Current session just began and results will be made available at the end of February

  27. Some Items about Data Systems • HIPAA and other legal issues • Performance Improvement • National EMS Database

  28. HIPAA & Legal Issues • Fact: HIPAA issues exist and local EMS agencies must adhere to this law • Fact: Most states are following HIPAA-like principles within their own domain • But states are exempt from this law

  29. HIPAA & Legal Issues • States sponsoring data systems • Still have agencies follow HIPAA • Help agencies do so • State collecting data • Still will collect PHI (data linkage) • Local agencies are in compliance

  30. Legal Issues • States still need to look at two issues • One: Having the mandate to collect data • Most have existing laws but they are older than computerized technology • These laws need to be updated • Two: Having data protections in place • QI protection • Open Govt. protection

  31. PerformanceImprovement

  32. Performance Improvement • How are we doing as a system? • What we should be doing as a system?

  33. 911 System Where We Need to Be • EMS is one piece of a health care puzzle

  34. -Uniform Data -Good Data -etc. -Who? -Why? -etc. -Training -Role Model -etc. How are We Doing? Available Data Grade A for Effort C for Quality Available Personnel Available Expertise

  35. Number of Defects Judgment-Based Changes Informative Changes 100% 0% 0% Amount of Information You Collect And is Put to Good Use 100%

  36. Delaware Protocol Development

  37. Total Airway Package • The “Total Airway Package” was the paramedics reviewing every aspect of respiratory distress and how the Delaware EMS system operated

  38. So What Do You Want to Be Able to Do with the EMS Data System?

  39. National EMS Database

  40. NED: It Exists • Data from 3 states • NEMSIS-based data • MN, NH, NC • EMS events from 7 states • 500,000+ records (changes weekly)

  41. NED: It Exists • Database and Reporting • Housed in Utah • The first reports will be “canned” • Target to have them by March 1, 2007 • NEMSIS TAC hiring a reporting specialist • To refine the data coming into the system • To create an automated system (Fall ’07)

  42. Conclusion • The NEMSIS Standard is here to stay • Colorado is making a good start at getting a system in place • I predict they would love to get input from you about the development and implementation of the system • Remember: • “Every positive action requires expenditure” -President Dwight D. Eisenhower

  43. Any More Questions?

  44. T H A N K YOU

More Related