The Journal of mHealth Vol 3 Issue 1 (Feb/Mar 2016) | Page 26

Health Data Exchange Empowers Clinicians to Deliver Patient-centred Care How Health Data Exchange Empowers Clinicians to Deliver Patient-centred Care 3 early interoperability success stories By Martha Thorne, Senior Vice President & General Manager, Population Health at Allscripts As electronic health records (EHRs) become commonplace, healthcare organisations have vast amounts of patient data in electronic form. This information is powerful when clinicians can easily and securely share it across care settings. Studies show that access to comprehensive patient information can help clinicians make better decisions at the point of care.1 While industry progress toward interoperability has been slow, pioneers of health data exchange are seeing some promising results. Three organisations that use Allscripts interoperability platform, dbMotion Solution, are among those dedicated to improving interoperability and patient-centred care. Data exchange in UPMC’s paediatric environment As a large health system in Pennsylvania, UPMC operates more than 20 hospitals and 500 outpatient sites. The interoperability effort in its paediatric environment crosses two busy tertiary care facilities, Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC and Magee-Women’s Hospital of UPMC. “It’s all about meaningful contextual information at the point of care,” UPMC Clinical Director of Interoperability Amy Urban, DO, said. “The right information, to the right stakeholder, in the right format, through the right channel, at the right point in the workflow.” Dr. Urban emphasizes that the true goal of interoperability is to provide patientcentric care. The UPMC effort includes: »» Intra-hospital exchange. Communication starts within the hospital. Continuity of obstetric care 24 February/March 2016 is important – from prenatal care, through labour and delivery and post-natal care. Inpatient and outpatient systems must seamlessly review and exchange data. »» Intra-facility exchange and transfer. For situations such as high-risk neonatal births, or special surgical and subspecialty evaluation of infants, it’s important for UPMC’s facilities to be able to share information. When babies move between facilities, their complete medical records must follow. »» Inter-institutional exchange and transfer. UPMC hospitals often receive patients from surrounding community hospitals and urgent care clinics for further evaluation and care. It’s connecting with statewide sources of information, such as health information exchanges (HIEs) and immunization databases, to review pertinent medical records to ensure high quality care. Two outpatient paediatric facilities went live on the interoperability solution via the HIE in 2013 and started using the data. For example, a paediatric rehabilitation facility has 194 active clinical users who have viewed 9,300 patient records. One of the largest independent paediatric physician practices in western Pennsylvania also went live viewing data in 2013, and it has 160 active clinical users who have viewed more than 2