首页> 外文期刊>Frontiers in Veterinary Science >Evidence in Practice – A Pilot Study Leveraging Companion Animal and Equine Health Data from Primary Care Veterinary Clinics in New Zealand
【24h】

Evidence in Practice – A Pilot Study Leveraging Companion Animal and Equine Health Data from Primary Care Veterinary Clinics in New Zealand

机译:实践中的证据–利用来自新西兰初级保健兽医诊所的伴侣动物和马匹健康数据进行的初步研究

获取原文
           

摘要

Veterinary practitioners have extensive knowledge of animal health from their day-to-day observations of clinical patients. There have been several recent initiatives to capture these data from electronic medical records for use in national surveillance systems and clinical research. In response, an approach to surveillance has been evolving that leverages existing computerized veterinary practice management systems to capture animal health data recorded by veterinarians. Work in the United Kingdom within the VetCompass program utilizes routinely recorded clinical data with the addition of further standardized fields. The current study describes a prototype system that was developed based on this approach. In a four-week pilot study in New Zealand, clinical data on presentation reasons and diagnoses from a total of 344 patient consults were extracted from two veterinary clinics into a dedicated database and analyzed at the population level. New Zealand companion animal and equine veterinary practitioners were engaged to test the feasibility of this national practice-based health information and data system. Strategies to ensure continued engagement and submission of quality data by participating veterinarians were identified, as were important considerations for transitioning the pilot program to a sustainable large-scale and multi-species surveillance system that has the capacity to securely manage Big Data. The results further emphasized the need for a high degree of usability and smart interface design to make such a system work effectively in practice. The geospatial integration of data from multiple clinical practices into a common operating picture can be used to establish the baseline incidence of disease in New Zealand companion animal and equine populations, detect unusual trends that may indicate an emerging disease threat or welfare issue, improve the management of endemic and exotic infectious diseases and support research activities. This pilot project is an important step towards developing a national surveillance system for companion animals and equines that moves beyond emerging infectious disease detection to provide important animal health information that can be used by a wide range of stakeholder groups, including participating veterinary practices.
机译:从临床患者的日常观察中,兽医从业人员对动物健康有广泛的了解。最近有一些举措从电子病历中捕获这些数据,以用于国家监视系统和临床研究。作为回应,一种监视方法已经在发展,该方法利用现有的计算机化兽医实践管理系统来捕获兽医记录的动物健康数据。 VetCompass计划在英国开展的工作利用常规记录的临床数据以及更多标准化领域。当前的研究描述了基于这种方法开发的原型系统。在新西兰进行的为期四周的前期研究中,从两家兽医诊所中提取了总共344位患者就诊原因和诊断的临床数据,并将其收集到专用数据库中,并在人群水平进行了分析。新西兰的伴侣动物和马兽医从业人员被聘用,以测试这种基于国家实践的健康信息和数据系统的可行性。确定了确保参与的兽医继续参与并提交高质量数据的策略,这是将试点计划过渡到具有安全管理大数据能力的可持续的大规模多物种监视系统的重要考虑因素。结果进一步强调了对高度可用性和智能界面设计的需求,以使这种系统在实践中有效地工作。将来自多种临床实践的数据进行地理空间整合到共同的操作图中,可用于确定新西兰伴侣动物和马群疾病的基线发病率,检测可能表明正在出现疾病威胁或福利问题的异常趋势,改善管理流行病和外来传染病并支持研究活动。该试点项目是朝着建立国家伴侣动物和马的监视系统迈出的重要一步,该系统已超越了新兴传染病检测的范围,提供了重要的动物健康信息,可供利益相关者团体广泛使用,包括参与的兽医实践。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号