Achieving Data Liquidity: Lessons Learned from Analysis of 38 Clinical Registries (The Duke-Pew Data Interoperability Project.

dc.contributor.author

Tcheng, James E

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Drozda, Joseph P

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Gabriel, Davera

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Heath, Anne

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Wilgus, Rebecca W

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Williams, Mary

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Windle, Thomas A

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Windle, John R

dc.date.accessioned

2020-05-01T14:13:19Z

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2020-05-01T14:13:19Z

dc.date.issued

2019-01

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2020-05-01T14:13:18Z

dc.description.abstract

BACKGROUND:To assess the current state of clinical data interoperability, we evaluated the use of data standards across 38 large professional society registries. METHODS:The analysis included 4 primary components: 1) environmental scan, 2) abstraction and cross-tabulation of clinical concepts and corresponding data elements from registry case report forms, dictionaries, and / or data models, 3) cross-tabulation of same across national common data models, and 4) specifying data element metadata to achieve native data interoperability. RESULTS:The registry analysis identified approximately 50 core clinical concepts. None were captured using the same data representation across all registries, and there was little implementation of data standards. To improve technical implementation, we specified 13 key metadata for each concept to be used to achieve data consistency. CONCLUSION:The registry community has not benefitted from and does not contribute to interoperability efforts. A common, authoritative process to specify and implement common data elements is greatly needed.

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1942-597X

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20585

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eng

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AMIA

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AMIA ... Annual Symposium proceedings. AMIA Symposium

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Achieving Data Liquidity: Lessons Learned from Analysis of 38 Clinical Registries (The Duke-Pew Data Interoperability Project.

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Journal article

pubs.begin-page

864

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873

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School of Medicine

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Family Medicine and Community Health

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Medicine, Cardiology

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Duke

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Clinical Science Departments

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Medicine

pubs.publication-status

Published

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2019

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