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Notifiable condition reporting practices: implications for public health agency participation in a health information exchange

机译:须通报的状况报告做法:对公共卫生机构参与健康信息交流的影响

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Background The future of notifiable condition reporting in the United States is undergoing a transformation with the increasing development of Health Information Exchanges which support electronic data-sharing and -transfer networks and the wider adoption of electronic laboratory reporting. Communicable disease report forms originating in clinics are an important source of surveillance data for public health agencies. However, problems of poor data quality and delayed submission of reports to public health agencies are common. In addition, studies of barriers and facilitators to reporting have assumed that the primary reporter is the treating physician, although the extent to which a provider is involved in the reporting workflow is unclear. We sought to better understand the barriers to and burden of notifiable condition reporting from the perspectives of the three primary groups involved in reporting workflow: providers, clinic staff who bear the principal responsibility for reporting, and the public health workers who receive and process reports from clinics. In addition, we sought to situate these findings within the context of the future of notifiable disease reporting and the potential impacts of electronic lab and medical records on the surveillance system. Methods Seven ambulatory care clinics and 3 public health agencies that are part of a Health Information Exchange in the state of Indiana, USA, participated in the study. Data were obtained from a survey of clinic physicians ( N =?29), interviews with clinic reporters ( N =?11), and interviews with public health workers ( N =?9). Survey data were summarized descriptively and interview transcripts underwent qualitative analysis. Results In both clinics and public health agencies, the laboratory report initiates reporting workflow. Provider involvement with reporting primarily revolves around ordering medications to treat a condition confirmed by the lab result. In clinics, reporting is typically the responsibility of clinic reporters who vary in frequency of reporting. We found an association between frequency of reporting, reporting knowledge and perceptions of reporting burden. In both clinics and public health agencies, interruptions and delays in reporting workflow are encountered due to inaccurate or missing information and impact reporting timeliness, data quality and report completeness. Both providers and clinic reporters lack clarity regarding how data submitted by their reports are used by public health agencies. It is possible that the value of reporting may be diminished when those responsible do not perceive receiving benefit in return. This may account for the low awareness of or recollection of public health communications with clinics that we observed. Despite the high likelihood that public health advisories and guidance are based, in part, on data submitted by clinics, a direct concordance may not be recognized. Conclusions Unlike most studies of notifiable condition reporting, this study included the clinic reporters who bear primary responsibility for completing and submitting reports to public health agencies. A primary barrier to this reporting is timely and easy access to data. It is possible that expanded adoption of electronic health record and laboratory reporting systems will improve access to this data and reduce reporting the burden. However, a complete reliance on automatic electronic extraction of data requires caution and necessitates continued interfacing with clinic reporters for the foreseeable future—particularly for notifiable conditions that are high-impact, uncommon, prone to false positive readings by labs, or are hard to verify. An important finding of this study is the association between frequency of reporting, reporting knowledge and perceptions of reporting burden. Increased automation could result in even lower reporting knowledge and familiarity with reporting requirements which could actually increase reporters’ perception of notifiable condition reporting as burdensome. Another finding was of uncertainty regarding how data sent to public health agencies is used or provides clinical benefit. A strong recommendation generated by these findings is that, given their central role in reporting, clinic reporters are a significant target audience for public health outreach and education that aims to alleviate perceived reporting burden and improve reporting knowledge. In particular, communicating the benefits of public health’s use of the data may reduce a perceived lack of information reciprocity between clinical and public health organizations.
机译:背景技术随着健康信息交换系统的不断发展,支持医疗数据共享和传输网络以及电子实验室报告的更广泛采用,美国可通报疾病报告的未来正在发生转变。源自诊所的传染病报告表是公共卫生机构监视数据的重要来源。但是,数据质量差和向公共卫生机构提交报告延迟的问题很常见。另外,尽管不清楚提供者在报告工作流程中的参与程度,但对报告障碍和促进因素的研究假设主要报告者是主治医师。我们试图从报告工作流程涉及的三个主要群体的角度更好地了解应报告病情报告的障碍和负担:提供者,承担报告主要责任的诊所工作人员以及接收并处理来自报告的报告的公共卫生工作者诊所。此外,我们试图将这些发现置于未来可报告疾病报告以及电子实验室和医疗记录对监视系统的潜在影响的背景下。方法作为美国印第安纳州健康信息交流的一部分的七个门诊诊所和三个公共卫生机构参加了该研究。数据来自对临床医生的调查(N = 29),对临床记者的采访(N = 11)和对公共卫生工作者的采访(N = 9)。对调查数据进行描述性总结,并对访谈笔录进行定性分析。结果在诊所和公共卫生机构中,实验室报告都会启动报告工作流程。提供者参与报告的工作主要围绕订购药物以治疗实验室结果证实的疾病。在诊所中,报告通常是报告频率不同的诊所报告者的责任。我们发现报告频率,报告知识与报告负担感之间存在关联。在诊所和公共卫生机构中,由于信息不正确或缺失而导致报告工作流程中断和延迟,并影响报告的及时性,数据质量和报告完整性。提供者和诊所记者都不清楚公共卫生机构如何使用其报告提交的数据。当责任者不认为回报会带来好处时,报告的价值可能会降低。这可能是由于我们观察到的诊所对公共卫生通讯的了解不足或记忆不足。尽管公共卫生咨询和指南在某种程度上基于诊所提交的数据的可能性很大,但直接的一致性可能无法被认可。结论与大多数报告性疾病报告研究不同,该研究包括临床报告者,他们主要负责完成报告并向公共卫生机构提交报告。这种报告的主要障碍是及时,轻松地访问数据。电子病历和实验室报告系统的广泛采用可能会改善对这些数据的访问并减轻报告负担。但是,完全依赖于自动电子提取数据需要谨慎,并且在可预见的将来(尤其是对于那些影响力大,不常见,实验室容易出现假阳性读数或难以验证的可报告情况),必须继续与临床报告员进行交互。 。这项研究的重要发现是报告频率,报告知识与报告负担感之间的关联。自动化程度的提高可能会导致甚至更低的报告知识和对报告要求的熟悉程度,实际上可能会使报告者更加了解应通报的状况报告。另一个发现是不确定如何使用发送到公共卫生机构的数据或提供临床益处。这些发现产生的强烈建议是,鉴于临床报告员在报告中的核心作用,它们是公共卫生宣传和教育的重要目标受众,旨在减轻感知的报告负担并提高报告知识。特别是,传达公共卫生使用数据的好处可能会减少临床组织与公共卫生组织之间缺乏互惠的信息。

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