220 likes | 732 Views
NAPHSIS. National Association for Public Health Statistics and Information SystemsRepresents all 57 health statistics and vital registration jurisdictionsFunded by SSA since 1999 to support development of EDR systems throughout the U.S.SSA has provided funding to 31 jurisdictions for the development and implementation of EDR systemswww.naphsis.org.
E N D
1. Electronic Death Registration Systemsin the United States
Rose Trasatti
Project Manager
National Association for Public Health Statistics and Information Systems
2. NAPHSIS National Association for Public Health Statistics and Information Systems
Represents all 57 health statistics and vital registration jurisdictions
Funded by SSA since 1999 to support development of EDR systems throughout the U.S.
SSA has provided funding to 31 jurisdictions for the development and implementation of EDR systems
www.naphsis.org
3. Certificate of Death Permanent legal record of fact and cause of death
Identifies deceased individual
Includes demographic information of the deceased
Specifies final disposition of the body
Specifies the cause of death of the deceased
Provides information about the funeral director and medical certifier completing the record
4. Certificate of Death usages Used for both administrative and public health analytical needs
Necessary for the family to handle the business matters of the decedent
Source of mortality statistics at national and jurisdictional level
Data used to:
Allocate research and development funding
Establish goals related to public health
Measure health status
5. What is EDR? Electronic filing of death certificates
On-line collaboration among multiple death registration system users
User-friendly death record data entry screens
Fact-of-Death data entry
Cause-of-Death data entry
Built-in instructions and on-line help
Internet accessibility
Electronic authentication
User IDs/passwords
Personal Identification Numbers (PINs)
Biometrics
6. Who benefits from an EDRS? Physicians, medical examiners and coroners
Institutions
Hospitals
Nursing Homes
Hospice
Funeral directors
Local and state registrars
Federal, state and local agencies
Public health researchers
Families
7. 7 Benefits of an EDRS Greater efficiency- participants interact electronically
Improved timeliness of death registration
Higher quality data via real-time edits
Reduces errors in and rejection of death certificates
Promotes uniformity in demographic and cause-of-death statistics
Increased security and fraud prevention
Supports partial electronic/paper death registration
8. Benefits of an EDRS Capability to report fact-of-death to SSA with increased accuracy and timeliness
Verified Social Security numbers
Capability to report cause-of-death with increased accuracy and timeliness
Integral part of patient care
Uniformity in cause-of-death statistics
Improves the cause-of-death data for electronic disease surveillance systems
9. Benefits of an EDRS Electronic referrals to Medical Examiners/Coroners by
Physicians
Funeral directors
Health departments
Key terms (fall, laceration, hypothermia…)
Electronic submission of supplemental cause-of-death information for pending investigations
Electronic cremation approvals
Printing of the Burial Permit at the Funeral Home
Electronic trade calls between Funeral Homes
Ordering of certified copies
10. EDRS implementation challenges An EDRS is a complex system
Numerous data items with extensive edit checks
Detailed business rules and workflow
Multiple users working on the same death record
Many users accessing the system from many points
Internet application with a need for high-levels of security
11. EDRS implementation challenges An EDRS is a complex system
Costly to develop
Takes time to configure/customize system to meet requirements
Numerous participants
Need to be trained
Need to be provided access to the EDR system
Help desk
Requires the availability of Department of Health resources
12. EDRS implementation challenges EDRS funding is needed for
Hardware costs
Servers
Biometric devices
System development costs
Vendor
In-house
Staff resources throughout project life cycle
Training
Ongoing maintenance
Help desk
Hardware/software
Training new users
13. Sample EDR system development and implementation costs
14. EDRS implementation challenges Because an EDRS is a complex system, in order to be successful a jurisdiction must have:
Well defined requirements
Realistic schedule
Sufficient funding
Technical expertise in developing the system
Sufficient participation by stakeholders in the full project lifecycle
Adequate infrastructure and connectivity to the Internet
15. EDRS experiences – what we learned Important to market and garner EDRS support
National level
Local level
Commonality among jurisdictions related to EDR
Standards and guidelines can provide assistance in EDRS development
A national model defining requirements can provide a starting point for EDRS development
Jurisdictions can learn from each other
Focal point of contact needed to facilitate communication
16. NAPHSIS EDRS activities Focus on education and marketing at the national level
Death data providers
State and local government
Federal agencies
Death data users
Developed marketing brochures and training packages
17. NAPHSIS EDR marketing brochures
18. NAPHSIS EDRS activities Exhibited EDR booth and spoken at national level conferences
National Funeral Director Association
National Association of Medical Examiners
Alliance for Continuing Medical Education
Association for Hospital Medical Education
American Medical Association Continuing Medical Education Director’s Taskforce
19. NAPHSIS EDRS activities Provide consulting services to jurisdictions for implementing EDR systems
Meet with vital records agencies/vital records staff
Meet with EDR participants
Help review EDRS materials developed in-house or by a vendor
Facilitate communication with other jurisdictions
Established an EDR Documentation Library
EDRS Standards & Guidelines
EDRS RFP Template and Proposal Evaluation Guide
EDRS Best Practices and Lessons Learned
Assist jurisdictions with the tailoring of the EDRS National Model to meet their needs
20. EDRS National Model Model meets 80-85% of any jurisdiction’s electronic death registration requirements
Addressed the needs of the death data providers
Included participation from multiple jurisdictions
Re-engineering artifacts developed
Components are modular
Use cases and activity diagrams
Recommended reports, files, outputs
EDR system requirements and business rules
22. EDR Collaboration and Partnerships Department of Health (DOH)
Vital Records Directors
Influenza Coordinators
BT Coordinators
State Epidemiologists
EDR Users
Physicians, Medical Examiners, Coroners
Hospitals, Nursing Homes, Hospice Care
Funeral Directors
Participate in the planning process
Invite DOH staff to write articles for local publications
23. NAPHSIS contact information Rose Trasatti
Project Manager
National Association for Public Health Statistics and Information Systems
(NAPHSIS)
801 Roeder Road Suite 650
Silver Spring, Maryland 20910
(301) 563-6001 (phone)
(301) 563-6012 (fax)
www.naphsis.org
rtrasatti@naphsis.org