Standardizing our perinatal language to facilitate data sharing

Our ultimate goal as obstetric and neonatal care providers is to improve care for mothers and their babies. Continuous quality improvement (CQI) involves iterative cycles of practice change and audit of ongoing clinical care identifying practices that are associated with good outcomes. A vital prere...

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Main Author: Massey, Kiran Angelina
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3231
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.-32312013-06-05T04:17:18ZStandardizing our perinatal language to facilitate data sharingMassey, Kiran AngelinaSemanticsElectronic health recordPerinatal health programsDatabasesSNOMED CT(R)InteroperabilityOur ultimate goal as obstetric and neonatal care providers is to improve care for mothers and their babies. Continuous quality improvement (CQI) involves iterative cycles of practice change and audit of ongoing clinical care identifying practices that are associated with good outcomes. A vital prerequisite to this evidence based medicine is data collection. In Canada, much of the country is covered by separate fragmented silos known as regional reproductive care databases or perinatal health programs. A more centralized system which includes collaborative efforts is required. Moving in this direction would serve many purposes: efficiency, economy in the setting of limited resources and shrinking budgets and lastly, interaction among data collection agencies. This interaction may facilitate translation and transfer of knowledge to care-givers and patients. There are however many barriers towards such collaborative efforts including privacy, ownership and the standardization of both digital technologies and semantics. After thoroughly examining the current existing perinatal data collection among Perinatal Health Programs (PHPs), and the Canadian Perinatal Network (CPN) database, it was evident that there is little standardization of definitions. This serves as one of the most important barriers towards data sharing. To communicate effectively and share data, researchers and clinicians alike must construct a common perinatal language. Communicative tools and programs such as SNOMED CT® offer a potential solution, but still require much work due to their infancy. A standardized perinatal language would not only lay the definitional foundation in women’s health and obstetrics but also serve as a major contribution towards a universal electronic health record.University of British Columbia2008-12-19T21:42:21Z2008-12-19T21:42:21Z20082008-12-19T21:42:21Z2009-05Electronic Thesis or Dissertation2580570 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2429/3231eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Semantics
Electronic health record
Perinatal health programs
Databases
SNOMED CT(R)
Interoperability
spellingShingle Semantics
Electronic health record
Perinatal health programs
Databases
SNOMED CT(R)
Interoperability
Massey, Kiran Angelina
Standardizing our perinatal language to facilitate data sharing
description Our ultimate goal as obstetric and neonatal care providers is to improve care for mothers and their babies. Continuous quality improvement (CQI) involves iterative cycles of practice change and audit of ongoing clinical care identifying practices that are associated with good outcomes. A vital prerequisite to this evidence based medicine is data collection. In Canada, much of the country is covered by separate fragmented silos known as regional reproductive care databases or perinatal health programs. A more centralized system which includes collaborative efforts is required. Moving in this direction would serve many purposes: efficiency, economy in the setting of limited resources and shrinking budgets and lastly, interaction among data collection agencies. This interaction may facilitate translation and transfer of knowledge to care-givers and patients. There are however many barriers towards such collaborative efforts including privacy, ownership and the standardization of both digital technologies and semantics. After thoroughly examining the current existing perinatal data collection among Perinatal Health Programs (PHPs), and the Canadian Perinatal Network (CPN) database, it was evident that there is little standardization of definitions. This serves as one of the most important barriers towards data sharing. To communicate effectively and share data, researchers and clinicians alike must construct a common perinatal language. Communicative tools and programs such as SNOMED CT® offer a potential solution, but still require much work due to their infancy. A standardized perinatal language would not only lay the definitional foundation in women’s health and obstetrics but also serve as a major contribution towards a universal electronic health record.
author Massey, Kiran Angelina
author_facet Massey, Kiran Angelina
author_sort Massey, Kiran Angelina
title Standardizing our perinatal language to facilitate data sharing
title_short Standardizing our perinatal language to facilitate data sharing
title_full Standardizing our perinatal language to facilitate data sharing
title_fullStr Standardizing our perinatal language to facilitate data sharing
title_full_unstemmed Standardizing our perinatal language to facilitate data sharing
title_sort standardizing our perinatal language to facilitate data sharing
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3231
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