30 research outputs found
System for context-specific visualization of clinical practice guidelines (GuLiNav): Concept and software implementation
Background: Clinical decision support systems often adopt and operationalize existing clinical practice guidelines leading to higher guideline availability, increased guideline adherence, and data integration. Most of these systems use an internal state-based model of a clinical practice guideline to derive recommendations but do not provide the user with comprehensive insight into the
model.
Objective: Here we present a novel approach based on dynamic guideline visualization that incorporates the individual patientâs current treatment context.
Methods: We derived multiple requirements to be fulfilled by such an enhanced guideline visualization. Using business process and model notation as the representation format for computer-interpretable guidelines, a combination of graph-based representation and logical inferences is adopted for guideline processing. A context-specific guideline visualization is inferred using a business rules engine.
Results: We implemented and piloted an algorithmic approach for guideline interpretation and processing. As a result of this interpretation, a context-specific guideline is derived and visualized. Our implementation can be used as a software library but also provides a representational state transfer interface. Spring, Camunda, and Drools served as the main frameworks for implementation. A formative usability evaluation of a demonstrator tool that uses the visualization yielded high acceptance among clinicians.
Conclusions: The novel guideline processing and visualization concept proved to be technically feasible. The approach addresses known problems of guideline-based clinical decision support systems. Further research is necessary to evaluate the applicability of the approach in specific medical use cases
A standards-based ICT framework to enable a service-oriented approach to clinical decision support
This research provides evidence that standards based Clinical Decision Support (CDS)
at the point of care is an essential ingredient of electronic healthcare service delivery. A
Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) based solution is explored, that serves as a task
management system to coordinate complex distributed and disparate IT systems,
processes and resources (human and computer) to provide standards based CDS.
This research offers a solution to the challenges in implementing computerised CDS such
as integration with heterogeneous legacy systems. Reuse of components and services to
reduce costs and save time. The benefits of a sharable CDS service that can be reused by
different healthcare practitioners to provide collaborative patient care is demonstrated.
This solution provides orchestration among different services by extracting data from
sources like patient databases, clinical knowledge bases and evidence-based clinical
guidelines (CGs) in order to facilitate multiple CDS requests coming from different
healthcare settings. This architecture aims to aid users at different levels of Healthcare
Delivery Organizations (HCOs) to maintain a CDS repository, along with monitoring and
managing services, thus enabling transparency.
The research employs the Design Science research methodology (DSRM) combined with
The Open Group Architecture Framework (TOGAF), an open source group initiative for
Enterprise Architecture Framework (EAF). DSRMâs iterative capability addresses the
rapidly evolving nature of workflows in healthcare. This SOA based solution uses
standards-based open source technologies and platforms, the latest healthcare standards
by HL7 and OMG, Decision Support Service (DSS) and Retrieve, Update Locate Service
(RLUS) standard. Combining business process management (BPM) technologies,
business rules with SOA ensures the HCOâs capability to manage its processes. This
architectural solution is evaluated by successfully implementing evidence based CGs at
the point of care in areas such as; a) Diagnostics (Chronic Obstructive Disease), b) Urgent
Referral (Lung Cancer), c) Genome testing and integration with CDS in screening
(Lynchâs syndrome). In addition to medical care, the CDS solution can benefit
organizational processes for collaborative care delivery by connecting patients,
physicians and other associated members. This framework facilitates integration of
different types of CDS ideal for the different healthcare processes, enabling sharable CDS
capabilities within and across organizations
A service oriented architecture to implement clinical guidelines for evidence-based medical practice
Health information technology (HIT) has been identified as the fundamental driver to streamline the healthcare delivery processes to improve care quality and reduce operational costs. Of the many facets of HIT is Clinical Decision Support (CDS) which provides the physician with patient-specific inferences, intelligently filtered and organized, at appropriate times. This research has been conducted to develop an agile solution to Clinical Decision Support at the point of care in a healthcare setting as a potential solution to the challenges of interoperability and the complexity of possible solutions. The capabilities of Business Process Management (BPM) and Workflow Management systems are leveraged to support a Service Oriented Architecture development approach for ensuring evidence based medical practice. The aim of this study is to present an architecture solution that is based on SOA principles and embeds clinical guidelines within a healthcare setting. Since the solution is designed to implement real life healthcare scenarios, it essentially supports evidence-based clinical guidelines that are liable to change over a period of time.
The thesis is divided into four parts. The first part consists of an Introduction to the study and a background to existing approaches for development and integration of Clinical Decision Support Systems. The second part focuses on the development of a Clinical Decision Support Framework based on Service Oriented Architecture. The CDS Framework is composed of standards based open source technologies including JBoss SwitchYard (enterprise service bus), rule-based CDS enabled by JBoss Drools, process modelling using Business Process Modelling and Notation. To ensure interoperability among various components, healthcare standards by HL7 and OMG are implemented. The third part provides implementation of this CDS Framework in healthcare scenarios. Two scenarios are concerned with the medical practice for diagnosis and early intervention (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Lung Cancer), one case study for Genetic data enablement of CDS systems (New born screening for Cystic Fibrosis) and the last case study is about using BPM techniques for managing healthcare organizational perspectives including human interaction with automated clinical workflows. The last part concludes the research with contributions in design and architecture of CDS systems.
This thesis has primarily adopted the Design Science Research Methodology for Information Systems. Additionally, Business Process Management Life Cycle, Agile Business Rules Development methodology and Pattern-Based Cycle for E-Workflow Design for individual case studies are used. Using evidence-based clinical guidelines published by UKâs National Institute of Health and Care Excellence, the integration of latest research in clinical practice has been employed in the automated workflows. The case studies implemented using the CDS Framework are evaluated against implementation requirements, conformance to SOA principles and response time using load testing strategy.
For a healthcare organization to achieve its strategic goals in administrative and clinical practice, this research has provided a standards based integration solution in the field of clinical decision support. A SOA based CDS can serve as a potential solution to complexities in IT interventions as the core data and business logic functions are loosely coupled from the presentation. Additionally, the results of this this research can serve as an exemplar for other industrial domains requiring rapid response to evolving business processes
Recommended from our members
A modular, open-source information extraction framework for identifying clinical concepts and processes of care in clinical narratives
In this thesis, a synthesis is presented of the knowledge models required by clinical informa- tion systems that provide decision support for longitudinal processes of care. Qualitative research techniques and thematic analysis are novelly applied to a systematic review of the literature on the challenges in implementing such systems, leading to the development of an original conceptual framework. The thesis demonstrates how these process-oriented systems make use of a knowledge base derived from workflow models and clinical guidelines, and argues that one of the major barriers to implementation is the need to extract explicit and implicit information from diverse resources in order to construct the knowledge base. Moreover, concepts in both the knowledge base and in the electronic health record (EHR) must be mapped to a common ontological model. However, the majority of clinical guideline information remains in text form, and much of the useful clinical information residing in the EHR resides in the free text fields of progress notes and laboratory reports. In this thesis, it is shown how natural language processing and information extraction techniques provide a means to identify and formalise the knowledge components required by the knowledge base. Original contributions are made in the development of lexico-syntactic patterns and the use of external domain knowledge resources to tackle a variety of information extraction tasks in the clinical domain, such as recognition of clinical concepts, events, temporal relations, term disambiguation and abbreviation expansion. Methods are developed for adapting existing tools and resources in the biomedical domain to the processing of clinical texts, and approaches to improving the scalability of these tools are proposed and evalu- ated. These tools and techniques are then combined in the creation of a novel approach to identifying processes of care in the clinical narrative. It is demonstrated that resolution of coreferential and anaphoric relations as narratively and temporally ordered chains provides a means to extract linked narrative events and processes of care from clinical notes. Coreference performance in discharge summaries and progress notes is largely dependent on correct identification of protagonist chains (patient, clinician, family relation), pronominal resolution, and string matching that takes account of experiencer, temporal, spatial, and anatomical context; whereas for laboratory reports additional, external domain knowledge is required. The types of external knowledge and their effects on system performance are identified and evaluated. Results are compared against existing systems for solving these tasks and are found to improve on them, or to approach the performance of recently reported, state-of-the- art systems. Software artefacts developed in this research have been made available as open-source components within the General Architecture for Text Engineering framework
Solution for the management of several clinical practice guidelines in a domain-independent decision support system
Malnutrition is a very frequent and serious problem in humans, even more in the elderly.
Advanced age brings with it a series of physiological (e.g., swallowing or chewing problems) and psychological changes that can be considered risk factors for malnutrition. It
is triggered by loss, dependency, loneliness, and chronic illness, and potentially impacts
on higher morbidity, mortality and the worsen of the quality of life. Without intervention,
it presents as a downward trajectory leading to poor health and decreased quality of life.
That is why it is essential to assess whether a risk situation exists and to evaluate to what
extent it can be evitable.
Therefore, the main objective of this work is to provide nutritional recommendations through a decision support system considering not only the different nutritional needs, also
the whole environment of an elderly patient, such as socio-demographic and economic
factors (sex, marital status, education...), psychosocial factors (social relationships, family, physical exercise...), and morbidity factors (diseases). Having this in mind, the aim
of this work is to provide the most personalized nutritional recommendations.
For this purpose, Clinical Practice Guidelines have been formalized along with experienced nutritionists on the domain within the NUTRIGEP project. The project consists of
a product that, in addition to predicting the risk of malnutrition, can prevent it in the
geriatric environment, contributing to the good nutritional management of the elderly in
order to improve their health condition. Physically it consists of a back-end and a frontend for clinicians and nutritionists, which conceives an integrated solution to support the
healthcare professional on the one hand, and to guide the nutritionist in developing personalized diets and preventing malnutrition on the other hand. This work has been focused
on the back-end part of this application for the creation, evaluation and management of
different rules, using the Drools rule engine and leaning on decision flows, which helped
us generating personalized recommendations for patients affected by either one or more
pathologies at the same time
Front-Line Physicians' Satisfaction with Information Systems in Hospitals
Day-to-day operations management in hospital units is difficult due to continuously varying situations, several actors involved and a vast number of information systems in use. The aim of this study was to describe front-line physicians' satisfaction with existing information systems needed to support the day-to-day operations management in hospitals. A cross-sectional survey was used and data chosen with stratified random sampling were collected in nine hospitals. Data were analyzed with descriptive and inferential statistical methods. The response rate was 65 % (n = 111). The physicians reported that information systems support their decision making to some extent, but they do not improve access to information nor are they tailored for physicians. The respondents also reported that they need to use several information systems to support decision making and that they would prefer one information system to access important information. Improved information access would better support physicians' decision making and has the potential to improve the quality of decisions and speed up the decision making process.Peer reviewe