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Positive Patient Id and Medical Device Data: Essential Safety Requirements. Describing current work – thanks to participants in related projects:. IHE (Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise) Patient Care Device domain, Point-of-Care Identity Management Work Group (Robert Flanders, GE, chair)
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Positive Patient Id and Medical Device Data: Essential Safety Requirements
Describing current work – thanks to participants in related projects: • IHE (Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise) Patient Care Device domain, Point-of-Care Identity Management Work Group (Robert Flanders, GE, chair) • HL7 Health Care Devices / Patient Care Detailed Clinical Models – Medical Devices (VA Device Connectivity group, Ioana Singureanu, methodology lead) • IEEE 11073 Medical Device Communications Upper Level Committee (CCoM) – Jan Wittenber, chair
Patient Identity travels with Patient Data • That just happens, right? • Oh, really? • What are the preconditions for it to “just happen” • What are the consequences if it doesn’t
The status quo • We’re talking about automated data flow from devices but in the “real world” manual transcription is still prevalent • Anything we change here should kick off a good risk analysis
The hazards • Treating patient based on wrong data • Potential consequences extremely serious • Missing data that ought to contribute to proper treatment • At least you might know it’s not there and therefore that something is wrong • again, harm can be serious • Data may be gone forever; not even available for “backfilling” by manual transcription – since many devices do not persist data at all, or for long
ECRI Institute, for one, notices ECRI Institute
What’s the current situation, best case? • Data start to flow when the patient is admitted to the location (e.g. fixed bed, or OR) • (Note well that there are many medical device situations this does not cover) • Even the “easiest” cases depends on correct, coordinated actions in multiple systems (device, device manager if any, patient registration system) and people (registration operator, clinician at point-of-care or unit console)
What can possibly go wrong? • Patient registration system has wrong (e.g. out-of-synchrony) information • Data loss (bad) • Data mis-attribution (data to wrong patient’s record – really bad) • At point-of-care, association not made, made wrongly, not checked
Breaking it down: Domain Analysis • Reduce entities, relations, and actions to their essences • Pay attention to use cases and work flows
Reducing identity to its essence • All about “same” and “different” • All medical data belonging to the same patient accessible together • Multifactor identification: using name, gender, date of birth • Need at least one identifier that maps one-to-one with the patient • Unique identifier for device also needed (IEEE EUI-64, GS1, FDA UDI project in progress)
Patient ID-capable devices • Middle to high-end devices with capable user interfaces, e.g. high-end patient monitors • Users emphatic that they don’t want to admit patient to multiple systems – that is risky anyway
The problem of 'floating' devices with little or no patient id capability • Spot-check monitors • Telemetry packs • Infusion pumps • Point-of-care lab devices
Identification aids • Bar code reader (or RFID, or similar) can help: patient id from wristband, action can be “signed” by user by scanning own identity, devices can have scannable labels • But what system supports the barcode? • How is the information joined together with the device data?
What is the system flow? • Is there an authoritative patient index? • What does it track, and not track? • What are the sources of its updates? • What are the latencies and delays possible?
What are the necessary information exchanges? • Available now: IHE Patient Data Query – basically a transaction to search the patient registry using one or more identification factors. Wild cards may be used. • Events – associate a patient with a location or device • A positive patient identity • Instant consistency checking • If error, instant notification
IEEE 11073 Clinical Context Object Management IEEE 11073-P20301
Mismatch to classic HL7 Patient Administration • Administrative inpatient admit or start encounter not the same as associating a patient with a device • Better, but not perfect, match to HL7 paradigm for scheduling a patient with a resource (under investigation IHE PCD PCIM)
Consider system context • device use cases • device capabilities • communications • data repertoire • legacy serial connection • network • locational clues • fixed network port
The participants • Patient care devices at point-of-care • Target system for data - EMR • Patient index system or similar • other • clinical decision support • multi-device systems of systems at point-of-care • ICE Integrated Clinical Environment (see mdpnp.org)
Location-based identification • fixed topology (e.g. known switch ports) • discoverable topology (device ID discoverable) • dynamic location sensing (e.g. RTLS) • human role in completing / confirming the ID • confirm with UI • confirm with id assist • barcodes
Dynamic association • Applicable to “floating devices” • Many risks to be analyzed • What are all the systems involved? • Transactions (IHE PCD Point-of-care Identity Management (PCIM) working on) • Associate device with patient • Break association of device with patient
work in progress • IHE Patient Care Devices • HL7 Detailed Clinical Models - Medical Devices • Driven by VA • IEEE 11073 CCoM • Want to participate? Come on in
All work products are open and cost-free to get and to use. Much information on wiki and open ftp site • For you to participate in meetings, your organization be a member – find out from the website (IHE.ORG) if it already is • If not, joining is simple and cost-free (only pain is likely to be getting legal department to read agreement) • Wiki.ihe.net – search for “PCIM”
HL7 • Must be a member to vote, but not to participate in meetings. HL7 is connected to ANSI, which has an open meetings policy • hl7.org > Resources > Work Groups > Health Care Devices • Sign up on listserv