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Published byPhillip Barrett Modified over 8 years ago
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The Morningside Initiative A Public-Private Partnership for Collaborative Development of a Knowledge Repository for Clinical Decision Support (CDS)
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Problems that have limited the dissemination & adoption of CDS Reluctance of organizations to share knowledge content for “implementable” CDS Content not formalized, or is encoded in proprietary formats Knowledge management mechanisms not available
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RE: proprietary concerns, it can be argued that: Core medical knowledge shouldn’t be proprietary The expected “tsunami” of new knowledge will require sharing Optimization by enterprises should be at level of their business practices/workflow processes
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Decision Rule Example Enterprise alerting rule IF Med1 = Captopril AND Med2 = Dyazide AND serum K+ > 5.0 THEN page MD Core Medical knowledge Classes of drugs (ACE inhibitor, thiazide/triamterene) Hyperkalemia as a definition Alerting condition Adaptable for different modes of interaction and use in CPOE, pharmacy order management, lab alert, ADE monitoring, … various alerting approaches, workflows, triggering rules, notification processes, …
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History of efforts to share CDS knowledge AHCPR, other consensus panels Yet difficulty operationalizing, not sufficiently patient-specific EPCs, Cochrane Collaboration Knowledge but not executable Guidelines.gov Not highly curated, most not executable Arden Syntax HL7/ANSII standard, widely used, but highly proprietary implementations Requires host-specific customization of all rules CPMC site lists ~240 rules, but not updated since 1997 GELLO New HL7/ ANSII standard expression language, but implementations just emerging, no content libraries IMKI Effort to form consortium of vendors, professional societies, and academic medical centers ~ 2001 Failed due to lack of willingness to contribute content
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Can we prime the process of sharing? This is the challenge the Morningside Initiative seeks to address Formed in August 2007
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The Morningside Initiative A joint project of: American Medical Informatics Association Arizona State University DoD Tri-Care Management Activity, Military Health System Henry Ford Health System Intermountain Health Kaiser Permanente Partners Healthcare Veterans Healthcare Administration
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Goal to stimulate sharing by Starting with a small group of committed organizations Public-private partnership Focusing on “executable” knowledge for CDS Already implemented, evaluated, effective Concentrating on organizational, technical, and content issues that have impeded sharing in the past Demonstrating effectiveness In terms of content and knowledge resources and secondary adoption Aim of scaling up to broader national (perhaps international) ongoing process
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CDS focus Emphasis on high-impact CDS needs Develop high quality knowledge resources Adopt formal representations Develop tools for managing the knowledge Develop tools and services for adapting knowledge to local settings
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Enterprise Knowledge Base Alerts Order sets Guidelines Reminders Shared Knowledge Base Enterprise Knowledge Base … Collaborative Knowledge Management External Knowledge Sources External Knowledge Sources
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Multiple rules have similar intent Differences relate to how triggered, how delivered, process/workflow integration Challenge is to identify core medical knowledge and to develop a taxonomy to capture types of implementation differences
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Morningside Initiative Structure Steering Committee Representatives of each organization Processes and procedures for collaboration, pursuit of funding, growth of initiative, approach to long-term sustainability Content Committee Use-case driven focus on kinds of application needs, sources of knowledge, editing and approval process, application of knowledge Technical Committee Tools and resources to share, manage, represent, update knowledge
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Functional requirements Driving use cases: Interoperable delivery of CDS at point of care through SOA interface DoD AHLTA and NHIN interoperability node as first case Goal of establishing a Knowledge Management Repository (KMR) and Guideline Workbench To deliver CDS into AHLTA environment via SOA Show interoperability on the NHIN DoD Federal Adapter
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Functional requirements overall model RequirementDiscussion The shareable knowledge repository will be a multi-component model The decision support capabilities are divided into separate components for analysis and design. Repository featuresContains essential CDS components: Medical logic Metadata Workflow descriptors Documentation Conformance testing data Management ToolsIncludes tools for managing/maintaining knowledge resources: Knowledge authoring tools Metadata editors Focused and batch testing tools Sharability FeaturesContains features that support exchange of medical knowledge among dissimilar systems: Knowledge Interchange Format (KIF) Converters to and from KIF Conformance data exchange tools Execution EnvironmentWhile not an official part of Morningside, a basic runtime environment will ultimately be needed to support knowledge testing within the knowledge repository.
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1. Knowledge Repository – the content Maintain stages of analysis, provenance of content Target of standard representation with annotations enabling localization and adaptation to particular settings
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2. Tools - the technology Knowledge acquisition Markup Management Localization
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3. Methods, ontologies, and schemas for sharability Meta data tags, standards, templates, and vocabularies for representation and markup Taxonomy of process/workflow/implementation contexts
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Delivery – the execution environment Not the focus of Morningside but provide the driving use cases Will also need a test environment for validating execution performance SOA as a particular example requiring precise specification of information model, terminology, and method for inserting into process/workflow
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Progress to date and plans Initial organization Founding members Work out collaboration and governance issues To expand to include other developers and adopters To be housed under AMIA umbrella initially Initial funding from TATRC, now with funds from a Congressional redirection Content development Initial focus on diabetes Collect, organize, synthesize from different sources Identify representation, browsing, editing, query, and application needs To expand to other areas Technical approach Based on open tools and data formats, non-proprietary Currently building first prototypes Adoption of standards where possible, intent to contribute to standards efforts
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Timeline Anticipated 5-year effort Year 1: inventory, planning, prototyping, organizing, gathering, working out details Year 2: initial implementation and experience Year 3-4: refinement and testing, planning for scale up Year 5: expansion and transition to self- sustaining model
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Why This Approach Is Unique Establishes a public-private partnership to collaboratively develop and disseminate CDS knowledge broadly Leverages time, expertise and cost investments across entities Provides a multi-organizational framework for decision making about content inclusion
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Acknowledgments Organizational support from American Medical Informatics Association (AMIA) Organizational and funding support from Telemedicine & Advanced Technology Research Center (TATRC) Funding support from Geneva Foundation: Congressionally Directed Medical Research Program
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