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The Building Blocks of Inter-operability
- Culbertson, Adam;
- Goel, Satyender;
- Madden, Margaret B;
- Safaeinili, Niloufar;
- Jackson, Kathryn L;
- Carton, Thomas;
- Waitman, Russ;
- Liu, Mei;
- Krishnamurthy, Ashok;
- Hall, Lauren;
- Cappella, Nickie;
- Visweswaran, Shyam;
- Becich, Michael J;
- Applegate, Reuben;
- Bernstam, Elmer;
- Rothman, Russell;
- Matheny, Michael;
- Lipori, Gloria;
- Bian, Jiang;
- Hogan, William;
- Bell, Douglas;
- Martin, Andrew;
- Grannis, Shaun;
- Klann, Jeff;
- Sutphen, Rebecca;
- O’Hara, Amy B;
- Kho, Abel
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.4338/aci-2016-11-ra-0196Abstract
Background
Patient matching is a key barrier to achieving interoperability. Patient demographic elements must be consistently collected over time and region to be valuable elements for patient matching.Objectives
We sought to determine what patient demographic attributes are collected at multiple institutions in the United States and see how their availability changes over time and across clinical sites.Methods
We compiled a list of 36 demographic elements that stakeholders previously identified as essential patient demographic attributes that should be collected for the purpose of linking patient records. We studied a convenience sample of 9 health care systems from geographically distinct sites around the country. We identified changes in the availability of individual patient demographic attributes over time and across clinical sites.Results
Several attributes were consistently available over the study period (2005-2014) including last name (99.96%), first name (99.95%), date of birth (98.82%), gender/sex (99.73%), postal code (94.71%), and full street address (94.65%). Other attributes changed significantly from 2005-2014: Social security number (SSN) availability declined from 83.3% to 50.44% (p<0.0001). Email address availability increased from 8.94% up to 54% availability (p<0.0001). Work phone number increased from 20.61% to 52.33% (p<0.0001).Conclusions
Overall, first name, last name, date of birth, gender/sex and address were widely collected across institutional sites and over time. Availability of emerging attributes such as email and phone numbers are increasing while SSN use is declining. Understanding the relative availability of patient attributes can inform strategies for optimal matching in healthcare.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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