Priorities to Overcome Barriers Impacting Data Science Application in Emergency Care Research.

dc.contributor.author

Puskarich, Michael A

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Callaway, Clif

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Silbergleit, Robert

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Pines, Jesse M

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Obermeyer, Ziad

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Wright, David W

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Hsia, Renee Y

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Shah, Manish N

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Monte, Andrew A

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Limkakeng, Alexander T

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Meisel, Zachary F

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Levy, Phillip D

dc.date.accessioned

2020-08-30T16:09:19Z

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2020-08-30T16:09:19Z

dc.date.issued

2019-01

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2020-08-30T16:09:18Z

dc.description.abstract

For a variety of reasons including cheap computing, widespread adoption of electronic medical records, digitalization of imaging and biosignals, and rapid development of novel technologies, the amount of health care data being collected, recorded, and stored is increasing at an exponential rate. Yet despite these advances, methods for the valid, efficient, and ethical utilization of these data remain underdeveloped. Emergency care research, in particular, poses several unique challenges in this rapidly evolving field. A group of content experts was recently convened to identify research priorities related to barriers to the application of data science to emergency care research. These recommendations included: 1) developing methods for cross-platform identification and linkage of patients; 2) creating central, deidentified, open-access databases; 3) improving methodologies for visualization and analysis of intensively sampled data; 4) developing methods to identify and standardize electronic medical record data quality; 5) improving and utilizing natural language processing; 6) developing and utilizing syndrome or complaint-based based taxonomies of disease; 7) developing practical and ethical framework to leverage electronic systems for controlled trials; 8) exploring technologies to help enable clinical trials in the emergency setting; and 9) training emergency care clinicians in data science and data scientists in emergency care medicine. The background, rationale, and conclusions of these recommendations are included in the present article.

dc.identifier.issn

1069-6563

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1553-2712

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/21357

dc.language

eng

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Wiley

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Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine

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10.1111/acem.13520

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Humans

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Consensus

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Emergency Medicine

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Research

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Electronic Health Records

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Data Accuracy

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Data Science

dc.title

Priorities to Overcome Barriers Impacting Data Science Application in Emergency Care Research.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Limkakeng, Alexander T|0000-0002-9822-5595

pubs.begin-page

97

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105

pubs.issue

1

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School of Medicine

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Surgery, Emergency Medicine

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Duke

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Surgery

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Clinical Science Departments

pubs.publication-status

Published

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26

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