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Issues in Public Health Informatics

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Title: Issues in Public Health Informatics


1
Issues in Public Health Informatics
  • Rita Kukafka, DrPH, MA
  • Department of Biomedical Informatics, College of
    Physicians and Surgeons
  • Department of Sociomedical Sciences, Mailman
    School of Public Health
  • Medical Informatics Course for Health
    Professionals
  • Woods Hole, MA
  • June, 2009

2
Issues in Public Health Informatics
  • Rita Kukafka, DrPH, MA
  • Department of Biomedical Informatics, College of
    Physicians and Surgeons
  • Department of Sociomedical Sciences, Mailman
    School of Public Health
  • Medical Informatics Course for Health
    Professionals
  • Woods Hole, MA
  • June, 2009

3
Session Overview
  • What is public health? (brief overview)
  • What is public health informatics?
  • Historical context for the discipline
  • Most pressing public health issues of today, and
    some examples or public health informatics
    solutions
  • Opportunities (happenings and training
    opportunities)

4
  • First, a perspective on public health

5
You might be a public health professional if you
are.
  • looking to control the most basic of human
    functions, e.g., lobbying the Federal Trade
    Commission to investigate snack-food and
    soft-drink marketing or promoting a twinkie
    tax."
  • worrying about eating, smoking, HIV/AIDS,
    bioterrorism, health literacy and hand washing
    all in one day.
  • spending hours per day trying to define yourself,
    your work, and explaining your work to others.

6
Public Health Professional
  • A person educated in public health or a related
    discipline who is employed to IMPROVE HEALTH
    through a POPULATION focus

7
Public Health
  • Prevents epidemics and the spread of disease
  • Protects against environmental hazards
  • Prevents injuries
  • Promotes and encourages healthy behaviors
  • Responds to disasters and assists communities in
    recovery
  • Assures the quality and accessibility of health
    services

8
10 Essential Public Health Services
  • Assessment
  • Monitor health status to ID community health
    problem
  • Diagnose and investigate health problems and
    hazards
  • Policy development
  • Inform, educate people about health issues
  • Mobilize community partnerships to solve health
    problems
  • Develop policies and plans
  • Assurance
  • Enforce laws and regulations that protect health
    and ensure safety
  • Link people to health services and assure care
  • Assure a competent public health and health care
    work force
  • Evaluate effectiveness of programs
  • Serving all functions
  • Research for new, innovative solutions to
    health problems

IOM, The Future of the Publics Health, 2002
9
A closer look at a population based
perspective- the foundation of public health
  • Disease risk is conceived of as a continuum
    rather than a dichotomy.
  • No clear division between risk for disease and no
    risk for disease with regard risk factors (e.g.,
    levels of blood pressure, cholesterol, alcohol
    consumption, tobacco consumption, physical
    activity, diet and weight)
  • Degrees of risk rather than just two extremes of
    exposure (i.e., risk and no risk).

The Future of the Public's Health in the 21st
Century (2002)
10
Population Based Perspective (Cont)
  • Most often, only a small percentage of any
    population is at the extremes of high or low
    risk. The majority of people fall in the middle
    of the distribution of risk.
  • Exposure of a large number of people to a small
    risk can yield a more absolute number of cases of
    a condition than exposure of a small number of
    people to a high risk.
  • Focus on the modification of risk for the entire
    population rather than for specific high-risk
    individuals is a population based strategy.

11
Hypothetical distribution of overweight and
obesity in a population a high-risk
intervention strategy targeting obesity
12
Distribution of Body Mass Index in the US
hypothetical shift of the distribution to lower
the mean
13
Population Based Perspective
  • An individuals risk of illness cannot be
    considered in isolation from the disease risk for
    the population to which he or she belongs.
  • Someone in the United States is more likely to
    die prematurely from a heart attack than someone
    living in Japan, because the population
    distribution of high cholesterol in the United
    States as a whole is higher than the distribution
    in Japan.
  • Applying the population perspective to a health
    measure means asking why a population has the
    existing distribution of a particular risk, in
    addition to asking why a particular individual
    got sick.
  • Leads to greatest improvements in a populations
    health

14
The Determinants of Population Health
The Future of the Public's Health in the 21st
Century (2002)
15
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16
Now
  • A perspective on public health informatics..

17
What is public health informatics?
  • Systematic application of information and
    computer science and technology to pubic health
    practice, research and learning.
  • (Yasnoff, 2001)
  • Simply stated, it is the application of
    informatics methods and theories to solve public
    health problems

18
Public Health Informatics in Perspective
Medical Informatics Methods, Techniques, and
Theories
Basic Research
Molecular and Cellular Processes
Tissues and Organs
Individuals (Patients)
Populations And Society
19
Disciplines underlying informatics
Law
Management
Disciplines within public health
20
Roots of Modern Public Health Informatics
  • In 1854, a major cholera outbreak in London had
    already taken nearly six hundred lives when Dr.
    John Snow, using a hand-drawn map, showed that
    the source of the disease was a contaminated
    water pump.

21
A Classic Story Dr. John Snow (1813-1858)
  • The relevant 1854 London Streets
  • Location of the Deaths from Cholera
  • The position of 13 water pumps

Population based orientation rather than patient
based
Generated using CDC Epi Map 2000 for Windows, a
public domain package that can be downloaded
from http//www.cdc.gov/epiinfo/EI2000.htm)
22
Today, we have a vast array of data to monitor
the publics health. 190 data sources are
currently being used to collect progress of
Healthy People 2010 health objectives for the
nation.
23
Key Challenges
  • Data collected categorically exist in silos,
    lacks standards and interoperability
  • PH reporting is traditionally slow, not suitable
    for responding to bioterrorism and emerging
    infectious diseases
  • Major gaps exist between public health and health
    care

24
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25
Examples of informatics applied to public health
practice
  • Outbreak detection and response (syndromic
    surveillance)
  • Public Health Enabled EHR and PHR
  • Provider-Centric EHR decision support and alerts
    for preventative services, delivering health
    guidelines and recommendations
  • Patient Centric EHR/PHR decision support for
    chronic disease prevention and management

26
Examples of informatics applied to public health
practice
  • Outbreak detection and response
  • (Syndromic Surveillance)

27
What is Syndromic Surveillance?
  • Real-time public health surveillance using data
    that is routinely collected for other purposes

28
Legal Mandate
Local health officers shall exercise due
diligence in ascertaining the existence of
outbreaks of illness or the unusual prevalence of
diseases, and shall immediately investigate the
causes of same.
New York State Sanitary Code, 10 NYCRR Chapter
1, Section 2.16(a)
29
New Response Requirements
  • Fast detection
  • Fast science
  • Fast effective communication
  • Fast effective integration
  • Fast effective action
  • Globalization, connectivity, and speed

30
Early Detection of Large Outbreaks
Symptom Onset
Severe Illness
Release
Number of Cases
Days
31
Potential Syndromic Surveillance Data Sources
  • Day 1- feels fine
  • Day 2- headaches, fever- buys Tylenol
  • Day 3- develops cough- calls nurse hotline
  • Day 4- Sees private doctor flu
  • Day 5- Worsens- calls ambulance
  • seen in ED
  • Day 6- Admitted- pneumonia
  • Day 7- Critically ill- ICU
  • Day 8- Expires- respiratory failure

Pharmaceutical Sales
Nurses Hotline
Managed Care Org
Absenteeism
Ambulance Dispatch (EMS)
ED Logs
Traditional Surveillance
32
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33
Practical concerns
  • Trade off between sensitivity (the ability to
    detect an attack when it occurs) and the
    false-positive rate (the probability of sounding
    an alarm when there in fact is no attack).
  • If every county in the United States had in place
    a single syndromic surveillance system with a 0.1
    percent false-positive rate that is, the alarm
    goes off inappropriately only once in a thousand
    days.
  • 3,000 counties in the United States an average
    of three counties a day would have a
    false-positive alarm.

34
Does syndromic surveillance really work?
  • A line of research considers epidemiologic
    characteristics of the pathogens that terrorist
    might use
  • Epidemiological characteristics of pathogens will
    impact the public health response

35
The second question, and the focus of most
current research how the performance of
syndromic surveillance systems can be improved?
  • Gaining access to more, different, and timelier
    data, as well as identifying data streams with a
    high signal-to-noise ratio.
  • Developing sophisticated statistical detection
    algorithms to elicit more from existing data and
    more accurate models that describe patterns in
    the data when there are no outbreaks, as well as
    detection algorithms that focus on particular
    kinds of patterns, such as geographical clusters,
    in the data.
  • Simulation studies to assess how quickly
    detection algorithms would detect an attack.

36
Still, Varying Level of Automation for Collection
of Data
  • Manual Reporting
  • Telephone
  • Paper
  • Paper w/ electronic reporting
  • Web-based
  • ? Case Based Reporting (drop-in systems)
  • Automated Data Collection

37
Syndromic Surveillance for Bioterrorism Following
the Attacks on the World Trade Center --- New
York City, 2001
Compared the daily ratio to its cumulative
baseline by hospital, hospital cluster, or
postal-code cluster. Alarms were generated when
the SNR (daily counts of each syndrome of
interest divided by the "none of the above)
category was significantly higher for the day in
question compared with the recent past.
38
Disease Syndromic Surveillancefor Hurricane
Katrina Evacuees Seeking Shelter in Houstons
Astrodome
  • Rapid health assessment tool cot surveys
  • Each evening at about 6 pm
  • Began with paper forms -- transitioned to
    handheld (PDAs)
  • Confirmed/Monitored outbreak of acute
    gastroenteritis

39
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40
BioSense
Began development in 2003 Cost 184 million,
with the remaining upgrade to cost another 314
million,
BioSense
41
new ways
42
Dual Benefits
  • The very same infrastructure and capabilities
    used to support data capture at the point of
    care for emergency preparedness can most
    definitely be used to implement non-attack public
    health intervention.

43
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44
EMS Drug Calls
45
Data are from McGinnis et al, JAMA 1993
The percentages are for all deaths Data
are from Mokdad et al JAMA 2004
46
Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 1996
(BMI 30, or 30 lbs. overweight for 5 4
person)
No Data lt10 1014
1519
47
Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 1998
(BMI 30, or 30 lbs. overweight for 5 4
person)
No Data lt10 1014
1519 20
48
Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 1999
(BMI 30, or 30 lbs. overweight for 5 4
person)
No Data lt10 1014
1519 20
49
Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 2000
(BMI 30, or 30 lbs. overweight for 5 4
person)
No Data lt10 1014
1519 20
50
Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 2001
(BMI 30, or 30 lbs. overweight for 5 4
person)
No Data lt10 1014
1519 2024 25
51
Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 2002
(BMI 30, or 30 lbs. overweight for 5 4
person)
No Data lt10 1014 1519
2024 25
52
Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 2003
(BMI 30, or 30 lbs. overweight for 5 4
person)
No Data lt10 1014 1519
2024 25
53
Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 2004
(BMI 30, or 30 lbs. overweight for 5 4
person)
No Data lt10 1014 1519 2024
25
54
Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 2005
(BMI 30, or 30 lbs. overweight for 5 4
person)
No Data lt10 1014 1519
2024 2529 30
55
Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 2006
(BMI 30, or 30 lbs. overweight for 5 4
person)
2006
No Data lt10 1014 1519
2024 2529 30
56
Health Care Spending and Life Expectancy
UC Atlas of Global Inequality
57
Clinical and Population Health Informatics
Diffusion Model
Data Interpretation
Data Interpretation
Clinical Systems
PopulationHealth
Data Analysis
Data Analysis
Information Dissemination
Data Collection
Data Collection
Two Way Information Flow
58
Perhaps the greatest challenge and ultimate
benefit of improved PH infrastructure utilizing
informatics methods
  • Closing the gap that exists between public health
    and health care
  • .enter the EHR and PHR

59
EHR/PHR
  • The PHR is also relevant to population health
  • It has a broader scope, encompassing the EHR-s
    and other health information that the consumer
    deems relevant that are not captured in the
    clinical setting

60
  • Support patient education opportunities
  • Produce tailored preventive health information,
    reminders, and alerts based on personal clinical
    records
  • Assist in identifying potential tailoring
    variables
  • Facilitate patient-provider communication by
    providing suggestions or scripts for providers on
    how to discuss sensitive topics
  • Using the EHR to allow patients to access,
    contribute to or correct their own medical record

Special Issue on Public health Informatics
(Kukafka, Yasnoff Eds.), Journal of Biomedical
Informatics 40(2007) 370-39.
61
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62
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63
Desired Outcomes
  • A Personal Health Record that incorporates public
    health priorities and cognitive research to
    empower patients in improving their preventive
    care.
  • An electronic clinical decision support system
    that incorporates public health priorities and
    epidemiologic data to empower clinicians in
    providing better preventive and acute care
  • Electronic health information exchange from
    clinical information systems that improves public
    health surveillance of antibiotic resistance and
    emerging health issues.

64
Citywide EHR Network
  • Procured best of breed EHR- eClinical Works
  • CCHIT certified, modern architecture, small
    office-friendly
  • 20 million contract
  • Correctional health 1,200 Medicaid providers
  • Preparing practices
  • Network and hardware Infrastructure
  • Practice readiness (HR policies, clinical
    champions, security, IT capacity, etc)
  • Implementation (September 2007)
  • Approximately 100 providers a month
  • Preceded by baseline data collection

65
EHRs Are Evolving
  • EHRs with decision support can help providers
    adhere to chronic disease prevention and
    management guidelines
  • In New York City, an existing EHR has been
    enhanced to include alerts and decision support
    based on 10 Steps for a healthier New York
  • Medical Home
  • Smoking
  • Heart Health and Diabetes
  • HIV Status
  • Depression
  • Alcohol and Drugs Dependence
  • Cancer Screening
  • Immunizations
  • Safe Homes (Asthma, Lead)
  • Maternal and Infant Health

66
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67
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68
Tailored Lifestyle Conversations
  • CDC funded to develop and pilot test a
    patient-centric electronic health record (PC-EHR)
    for chronic disease management and prevention

69
Challenges Assumptions
  • Good health is the patients main motivation for
    change
  • Patients want to change
  • Now is the time to change
  • Physician knows best how the patient should change

70
TLC Assumptions
  • Patients do not necessarily choose to work on the
    risk factor most harmful to their health
  • Since patient and provider priorities may often
    lack concordance, a transaction decision aid,
    between patient and provider presents a viable
    option to incorporate patient choice together
    with medical importance in coming to a decision
    that will accommodate both perspectives

71
Benefits to Considering Patient Choice
  • Better outcomes
  • Higher stages of behavior change
  • Stronger intention to adhere to recommendations
  • Improved emotional health
  • Improved overall health

72
Data exchange in integrated EHR/PHR Systems
PHR Patient Entered
EHR Clinical Encounter
Lifestyle
Cognitive
Literacy
Patient
Social Support
Finance
Cultural Beliefs
73
Patient Assessment

4 Health behavior modules
Psychosocial elements
74
Tailored TLC Report
Sample behavioral risk graphic
75
Tailored Patient Report
Sample patient decision support
76
Providers Report
77
Major PHI Challenges
  • Re-connecting clinical medicine and public health
    practice requires an improved public health
    infrastructure and public health workforce
    training
  • Thinking outside the box-
  • Dual use systems that are flexible
  • enough to respond to changing public health
    needs (proactive rather than responsive)

78
Four universitiesColumbia University, Johns
Hopkins, University of Utah, and the University
of Washingtonnow offer fellowships in Public
Health Informatics. The programs, designed to
prepare public health leaders to apply
informatics to public health problems, are
supported by a 3.68 million grant from The
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to the US National
Library of Medicine (NLM).
79
www.dbmi.columbia.edu
80
Perspective ChallengeDiverse Sets of Agencies
Partner Organizations
  • Affiliated Organizations
  • 115
  • Agencies / Professionals
  • 60 States Territories health departments
  • 3000 local heath departments
  • 100,000 professionals
  • 50 disciplines

81
The Public Health System
82
  • Field of public health informatics offers many
    challenges (and applications) yet to be
    discovered.

83
Where are we?
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