Veterinary Informatics Standards Development and Harmonization - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Veterinary Informatics Standards Development and Harmonization

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Veterinary Informatics Standards Development and Harmonization AVMA Stakeholders Meeting July, 2002 Nashville, TN Where do we need standards? Generally – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Veterinary Informatics Standards Development and Harmonization


1
Veterinary Informatics Standards Development and
Harmonization
  • AVMA Stakeholders Meeting
  • July, 2002
  • Nashville, TN

2
Where do we need standards?
  • Generally
  • Communication between computer systems
  • Laboratory-to-clinic data transmission
  • Laboratory-to-government agency,
    clinic-to-government agency
  • Central data repositories (all kinds)
  • Cancer registries
  • Eye-disease registries
  • Electronic health certificates
  • Portable electronic medical records
  • You talk - it types medical record keeping

3
Where do we need standards?
  • Specifically
  • When we need to transmit or receive the correct
    meaning of a concept.
  • Test for Equine Infectious Anemia which one?
  • When we need to transmit the specific context
    of a concept (Von Willebrands Disease).
  • This dog has VWD
  • This dogs littermate has VWD
  • Dog has family history of VWD

4
SNOMED history / future
SNOMED III
SNOMED RT
SNOMED CT
SNOP
SNOMED
SNOVET
1965
2000
Reduce storage size Reduce Storage size No longer relevant
Categorize information Multiple code-based hierarchies Poly-hierarchical categorization
Pathology content All Medicine Veterinary content separate, then integrated Integrated content
Computability for retrieval. Natural language, artificial intelligence, decision support
5
Funding models
  • LOINC NIH Grant from inception
  • HL7 Membership (dues) from 2200 medical
    records vendors, hospitals, medical device
    suppliers, government organizations
  • SNOMED College of American Pathologists (99),
    AVMA (1)
  • SNOMED hopes to establish a government-funded
    national license. Not clear if veterinary
    medicine will share in this support.

6
What standards are incomplete, underutilized or
missing?
  • Vocabulary
  • Laboratory tests
  • Disorders / findings
  • Procedures
  • Anatomy, organisms, substances, etc.
  • Data structure
  • Messaging

7
Veterinary standards?
Without standards 13 vocabulary technologies, 13
transmission formats
With standards 2 vocabulary technologies, 1
transmission format
8
Effects of global veterinary standards?
  • Reduce cost to system developers
  • IF amortized across multiple projects
  • Learn, manage, deploy a single technology for
    each major standards component.
  • Reduce total cost of standards development.
  • Facilitate outcomes assessment, epidemiology,
    disease surveillance, etc.

9
Effects of global veterinary standards?
  • Increased cost to system developers
  • Adhering to a global standard
  • Increased costs of cooperation?
  • Perceived loss of control, loss of specificity

10
Complaints about global standards
  • Its too
  • Big
  • Complicated
  • Expensive

11
Is this work expensive?
  • Yes, but
  • We are currently losing opportunities
  • Early discovery of new diseases
  • Critical evaluation of outcomes of therapy,
    surgery
  • Early alerts of disease outbreaks (reportable,
    foreign)
  • Ability to analyze and forecast trends

12
Is this work expensive?
  • IF the long-range goal is useful
  • Costs shift from individual organizations that
    would build mini standards to a central
    organization.
  • There may be cost savings to the profession as a
    whole.
  • The selected standards are more complex, complete
    and (we believe) more functional than those
    likely to be undertaken by individual
    organizations.
  • The cost of standards development may be somewhat
    higher to the profession as a whole.

13
Is this work expensive?
  • IF the long-range goal is useful
  • The selected standards adhere to design
    specifications that have developed through hard
    experience in the medical profession.
  • Essential / desirable features have been
    documented.
  • The selected standards represent extraordinary
    functionality, produced and maintained at great
    cost to the medical profession.
  • We can leverage these standards for 10 / 1.00

14
Equine reportable disease system.
  • Equine breeds
  • Equine occupations
  • Brief list of reportable diseases
  • Lab tests that support disease list
  • Message structures
  • clinic to regulatory authority
  • Lab to regulatory authority

15
Equine medical record
  • Equine Breeds
  • Equine lab tests
  • All applicable disorders, findings, procedures
  • Message structures
  • lab to clinic
  • clinic to lab
  • clinic to clinic

16
Subsets of standards
SNOMED-CT, HL-7, LOINC
17
1 three independent subsets
2 one subset of necessary messages
18
AVMA-adopted standards
  • HL-7
  • Messaging and medical record infrastructure
  • LOINC
  • Lab test vocabulary
  • SNOMED
  • General medical vocabulary

19
Questions for audience discussion
Are veterinary-wide information standards worth
pursuing?
Whats the appropriate time-frame?
20
What has been accomplished so far?
  • All three standards are (literally) open and
    committed to veterinary inclusion.
  • All three standards publicly recognize veterinary
    commitment and expertise.

21
What has been accomplished so far?
  • LOINC
  • Extensive list of veterinary-specific concepts
    are present in the nomenclature.
  • HL7
  • Standard now recognizes animals, animal
    identification, animal groupings, owners, etc.
  • SNOMED
  • Considerable veterinary content is present.
  • Mechanisms for improving the functionality of
    veterinary anatomy.

22
Can standards be implemented now?
  • Yes, but NOTHING about standards is, currently,
    off the shelf.
  • LOINC yes, veterinary labs can manage their
    test lists in LOINC (with an investment in
    mapping).
  • HL7 yes, although specific veterinary messages
    definitions must be derived
  • SNOMED yes but capturing the medical
    information currently requires considerable
    manual labor.

23
What has to be done to make standards practical
  • LOINC consensus and mapping by labs,
    distribution to computer system vendors.
  • HL7 develop a library of messages, maintain
    work-group to continue development.
  • SNOMED make anatomy functional, make species
    functional, develop subsets for all conceivable
    purposes in a medical record system.

24
(No Transcript)
25
Current funding / costs
  • SNOMED
  • ½ time veterinarian
  • ½ time full professor
  • Travel to 7 - 8 working meetings per year
  • LOINC
  • 1/6 time full professor
  • Travel to 3 meetings per year
  • HL-7
  • 1/6 time full professor
  • Travel to 6 meetings per year

26
Current funding / costs
  • SNOMED - 100,000 per year
  • LOINC 30,000 per year
  • HL-7 - 30,000 per year
  • AVMA covers 40
  • UC Davis and Virginia-Tech currently cover almost
    60.
  • VMDB provided start-up funding for standards
    selection, development. Continues to support
    veterinary health information managers at
    veterinary schools.

27
Current funding
Nominal NOT Optimal
28
What does AVMA offer?
  • Technical expertise
  • Infrastructure providing connection to users,
    vendors, etc.
  • Established relationships with standards
    organizations
  • Past and ongoing investment

29
What does your group have to offer?
  • A market
  • Content expertise
  • Presence
  • Definition
  • Subsetting expertise
  • Financial support
  • Willingness to understand
  • Contacts with foundations, granting agencies,
    etc.
  • Subject-specific grant writing expertise.

30
Veterinary Information Standards Development
Institute (VISDI)
  • Purpose provide infrastructure and expertise
    necessary to develop and deploy veterinary
    information standards.
  • Approach membership-based as an initial funding
    mechanism.
  • Activities standards liaison, standards
    development, project consultation, subsetting and
    mapping services.

31
Veterinary Information Standards Development
Institute (VISDI)
  • Resources
  • Human
  • Board of Directors (drawn from membership)
  • Case Wilcke
  • Veterinarians
  • Computer systems support personnel
  • Business staff
  • Technical
  • Computer (hardware, database, communications and
    internet services)
  • Office

32
Veterinary Information Standards Development
Institute (VISDI)
  • Membership
  • ABVS Colleges (ACVO, ACVIM, ACVS, etc.)
  • Professional organizations (AVMA, AAEP, AAHA,
    AASP, etc.)
  • Data Repositories (VMDB, etc.)
  • Government Organizations
  • Veterinary Schools / Teaching hospitals
  • Medical records vendors
  • Private practices
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