• Title of article

    Standardized Cardiovascular Data for Clinical Research, Registries, and Patient Care: A Report From the Data Standards Workgroup of the National Cardiovascular Research Infrastructure Project

  • Author/Authors

    Anderson، نويسنده , , H. Vernon and Weintraub، نويسنده , , William S. and Radford، نويسنده , , Martha J. and Kremers، نويسنده , , Mark S. and Roe، نويسنده , , Matthew T. and Shaw، نويسنده , , Richard E. and Pinchotti، نويسنده , , Dana M. and Tcheng، نويسنده , , James E.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
  • Pages
    12
  • From page
    1835
  • To page
    1846
  • Abstract
    Relatively little attention has been focused on standardization of data exchange in clinical research studies and patient care activities. Both are usually managed locally using separate and generally incompatible data systems at individual hospitals or clinics. In the past decade there have been nascent efforts to create data standards for clinical research and patient care data, and to some extent these are helpful in providing a degree of uniformity. Nonetheless, these data standards generally have not been converted into accepted computer-based language structures that could permit reliable data exchange across computer networks. The National Cardiovascular Research Infrastructure (NCRI) project was initiated with a major objective of creating a model framework for standard data exchange in all clinical research, clinical registry, and patient care environments, including all electronic health records. The goal is complete syntactic and semantic interoperability. A Data Standards Workgroup was established to create or identify and then harmonize clinical definitions for a base set of standardized cardiovascular data elements that could be used in this network infrastructure. Recognizing the need for continuity with prior efforts, the Workgroup examined existing data standards sources. A basic set of 353 elements was selected. The NCRI staff then collaborated with the 2 major technical standards organizations in health care, the Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium and Health Level Seven International, as well as with staff from the National Cancer Institute Enterprise Vocabulary Services. Modeling and mapping were performed to represent (instantiate) the data elements in appropriate technical computer language structures for endorsement as an accepted data standard for public access and use. Fully implemented, these elements will facilitate clinical research, registry reporting, administrative reporting and regulatory compliance, and patient care.
  • Keywords
    Informatics , Medical , vocabulary , cardiology , Controlled , Data standards
  • Journal title
    JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)
  • Serial Year
    2013
  • Journal title
    JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)
  • Record number

    1756365