Improving the quality of morbidity indicators in electronic health records in Swiss primary care
Author(s) -
André Busato,
H Bhend,
Corinne Chmiel,
Ryan Tandjung,
Oliver Senn,
Marco Zoller,
Thomas Rosemann
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
schweizerische medizinische wochenschrift
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 0036-7672
DOI - 10.4414/smw.2012.13611
Subject(s) - medicine , medical diagnosis , medical record , ehealth , primary care , diagnosis code , chronic disease , health care , family medicine , medical emergency , environmental health , population , economics , economic growth , pathology
QUESTIONS UNDER STUDY: The FIRE Project established a standardised data collection to facilitate research and quality improvement projects in Swiss primary care. The project is based on the concept of merging clinical and administrative data. Since chronic conditions and multimorbidity are major challenges in primary care, in this study we investigated the agreement between different approaches to identify patients with chronic and multimorbid conditions in electronic medical records (EMRs).\udMETHODS: A total of 60 primary care physicians were included and data were collected between October 2008 and June 2011. In total, data from 509594 consultations derived from 98152 patients were analysed. Chronic and multimorbid conditions were identified either by ICPC-2 codes or by the type of prescribed medication. We compared these different approaches regarding the completeness of the data to describe chronic conditions and multimorbidity of patients in primary care practices.\udRESULTS: The data showed a high correlation between the two morbidity schemes and both indicators apparently provide reliable measures of morbidity within practices. There was considerable variability of patients with chronic conditions across practices, irrespective of whether ICPC-2-diagnoses or prescribed drugs were used to code clinical encounters. Obvious discrepancies between diagnoses and therapies across major disease categories existed.\udCONCLUSIONS: This study describes the current situation of EMRs in terms of the ability to measure the burden of chronic conditions in primary care practices. The results illustrate a need of action for this specific topic and the results of this study will be incorporated into the functional specification of EMRs of a planned eHealth project in Swiss primary care
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