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Published in: BMC Public Health 1/2011

Open Access 01-12-2011 | Correspondence

Developing public health clinical decision support systems (CDSS) for the outpatient community in New York City: our experience

Authors: Sam Amirfar, John Taverna, Sheila Anane, Jesse Singer

Published in: BMC Public Health | Issue 1/2011

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Abstract

Background

Developing a clinically relevant set of quality measures that can be effectively used by an electronic health record (EHR) is difficult. Whether it is achieving internal consensus on relevant priority quality measures, communicating to EHR vendors' whose programmers generally lack clinical contextual knowledge, or encouraging implementation of EHR that meaningfully impacts health outcomes, the path is challenging. However, greater transparency of population health, better accountability, and ultimately improved health outcomes is the goal and EHRs afford us a realistic chance of reaching it in a scalable way.

Method

In this article, we summarize our experience as a public health government agency with developing measures for a public health oriented EHR in New York City in partnership with a commercial EHR vendor.

Results

From our experience, there are six key lessons that we share in this article that we believe will dramatically increase the chance of success. First, define the scope and build consensus. Second, get support from executive leadership. Third, find an enthusiastic and competent software partner. Fourth, implement a transparent operational strategy. Fifth, create and test the EHR system with real life scenarios. Last, seek help when you need it.

Conclusions

Despite the challenges, we encourage public health agencies looking to build a similarly focused public health EHR to create one both for improved individual patient as well as the larger population health.
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Metadata
Title
Developing public health clinical decision support systems (CDSS) for the outpatient community in New York City: our experience
Authors
Sam Amirfar
John Taverna
Sheila Anane
Jesse Singer
Publication date
01-12-2011
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Public Health / Issue 1/2011
Electronic ISSN: 1471-2458
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-11-753

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