Neonatal Care Report

7
Copyright 2009, Children’s Hospitals Neonatal Database – All Rights Reserved In affiliation with Child Health Corporation of America Neonatal Care Report Clinical Document Architecture (CDA) Release 2 Version 3

description

Neonatal Care Report. Clinical Document Architecture (CDA) Release 2 ∙ Version 3. Neonatal Care Report. Children’s Hospitals Neonatal Consortium (CHNC). Background & Rationale collaborative of 24 children’s hospital Neonatal ICUs multidisciplinary initiative, started in 2006 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Neonatal Care Report

Page 1: Neonatal  Care Report

Copyright 2009, Children’s Hospitals Neonatal Database – All Rights ReservedIn affiliation with Child Health Corporation of America

Neonatal Care ReportClinical Document Architecture (CDA)Release 2 ∙ Version 3

Page 2: Neonatal  Care Report

Copyright 2009, Children’s Hospitals Neonatal Database - All Rights Reserved - In affiliation with Child Health Corporation of America

Children’s Hospitals Neonatal Consortium (CHNC)

2

Background & Rationale collaborative of 24 children’s hospital Neonatal ICUs multidisciplinary initiative, started in 2006 limited knowledge about best practices & outcomes for the

unique population of infants in tertiary NICUs:

Neonatal Care Report

complex & uncommon neonatal diseases preterm infants with co-morbidities/complications ill term infants requiring emergent intervention

e.g., ECMO, surgery, dialysis congenital anomalies genetic & metabolic syndromes

typically referred for surgical and other subspecialty care

Page 3: Neonatal  Care Report

Copyright 2009, Children’s Hospitals Neonatal Database - All Rights Reserved - In affiliation with Child Health Corporation of America

3

Aims of the Initiative: To evaluate & optimize the tertiary neonatal intensive care

provided at children’s hospitals determine variations in care evaluate efficacy of current practices promote safety & facilitate research efforts spearhead benchmarking & quality improvement initiatives

CHNC Mission

Neonatal Care Report

ultimately improve clinical outcomes

Page 4: Neonatal  Care Report

Copyright 2009, Children’s Hospitals Neonatal Database - All Rights Reserved - In affiliation with Child Health Corporation of America

CHNC Partnership with Child Health Corporation of America (CHCA) In 2008, CHNC partnered with CHCA, a business alliance of 43

leading children’s hospitals Developed a comprehensive clinical database:

Children’s Hospitals Neonatal Database (CHND)

4Neonatal Care ReportDevelopment of Database - CHND

Establishment of a Core Data Set In 2009, CHNC/CHCA completes specifications for a core data

set of about 700 defined data fields Data collection primarily manual abstraction from current

systems of clinical documentation (costly)

Page 5: Neonatal  Care Report

Copyright 2009, Children’s Hospitals Neonatal Database - All Rights Reserved - In affiliation with Child Health Corporation of America

Children’s Hospitals Neonatal Database Participants

5

AtlantaBirmingham

BostonChicago

ColumbusCincinnati

DallasDetroitDenver

Fort Worth Houston

Kansas CityLittle Rock

Los AngelesMemphis (Le Bonheur)OaklandPhiladelphiaPittsburghSt. LouisSan DiegoSalt Lake CitySt. PetersburgWashington, DCWilmington, DE

*13 additional CHCA hospitals and 8 non CHCA sites considering future participation.

Neonatal Care Report

Page 6: Neonatal  Care Report

Copyright 2009, Children’s Hospitals Neonatal Database - All Rights Reserved - In affiliation with Child Health Corporation of America

Messaging a Subset of DataEmploying HL7 standards to facilitate electronic extraction HL7 Clinical Document Architecture (CDA) Release 2

Selection of Subset of Data Elements for the NCR unambiguous data fields, well established standards present in majority of centers (varied stages of EHR development)

6Neonatal Care Report (NCR)

Demographic data• Name, MRN, Maternal ZipBirth Data • Birth weight• Gestational Age • Apgar scores (1, 5, prolonged)Admission/Discharge Information• Dates• Measurements (weights, head circ.)

Acuity Scoring• severity of illness assessment • derived from existing mortality models:

• Pediatric Risk of Mortality: PRISM-III• Pediatric Index of Mortality: PIM-II• Clinical Risk Index for Babies: CRIB-II • Score for Neonatal Acute Physiology: SNAPPE II

• Predominantly laboratory and physiologic data• Scored at several intervals

• 1st 12 hours, Day 3, Day 7 of admission

Page 7: Neonatal  Care Report

Copyright 2009, Children’s Hospitals Neonatal Database - All Rights Reserved - In affiliation with Child Health Corporation of America

Working Group ContributorsCo-Chair/Co-Editor: Robert H. Dolin, MD

Semantically Yours, [email protected]

Co-Chair/Co-Editor: Liora AlschulerAlschuler Associates, [email protected]

Co-Chair: Calvin BeebeMayo [email protected]

Co-Chair: Keith W. BooneGE [email protected]

Primary Editor: Gay Giannone, MSN RNAlschuler Associates, [email protected]

Co-Editor: Joy Kuhl, MBA, CPFPrincipal | Optimal Accords, [email protected]

Co-Editor: Michael A. Padula, MDNeonatologist, Clinical InformaticistThe Children's Hospital of [email protected]

Co-Editor: Feliciano Yu, M.D.Information Technology Division Pediatrics Professor University of Alabama at Birmingham School of [email protected]

Co-Editor: David J. Durand, MDDirector, Division of NeonatologyChildren's Hospital and Research Center [email protected]

Co-Editor: Karna Murthy, MDNeonatologist, Children's Memorial HospitalAssistant Professor of PediatricsNorthwestern [email protected]

Co-Editor: Jacqueline KueserVice President, Strategy/R&DChildren’s Hospitals Corporation of America [email protected]

  Co-Editor: Kirk ElrodCHCA IT Liaison/Business AnalystChildren’s Hospitals Corporation of America [email protected]

 

Current Working Group also includes: Kate Conrad, Bobby George, Andy Spooner David Muraco, Diane Ward Celeste Milton, Jean Millar Ann WattShaun Shakib Sandy Stuart Brett Marquard Jingdong (JD) Li Anneke Goossen William GoossenTeresa Finitzo

7Neonatal Care Report