Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byHorace McCoy Modified over 9 years ago
1
Chapter 03 Mechanisms for Interfacing and Integrating Device Data SaigonTech – Engineering Division Integrating Device Data into the Electronic Medical Record by John Zaleski © 2009 by Publicis KommunikationsAgentur GmbH, GWA, Erlangen
2
2 Contents 1.Medical Device Interfaces 2.Communication Interface Architectures 3.Standardized Data Interfacing Formats 4.Other Medical Device Data SaigonTech – Engineering Division
3
3 1. Medical Device Interfaces 1.1 The basic communications mechanism The most simple and straightforward methods to retrieve data from medical instrumentation is the terminal emulator program Many systems only provide the capability for retrieving and archiving data in ASCII format SaigonTech – Engineering Division
4
4 1.2 Examples of transmitted and received data from ventilators SaigonTech – Engineering Division
5
5 DB: Define Breath RB: Read Breath CVR: Coded Value Response FV: Finding Value
6
6 2. Communication Interface Architectures Medical devices and device manufacturers tend to employ their own proprietary mechanisms at the device level for data communication which mandates the need for an independent-third party-interfacing mechanism (software device) to translate the data into the correct format and to ensure that data are interpreted correctly SaigonTech – Engineering Division
7
7
8
8
9
9
10
10 3. Standardized Data Interfacing Formats The data received from medical devices can be retrieved and stored in flat files on the computing hardware platform for tertiary processing and transmission to the EMR They can also be transformed directly into a more standardized message, such as HL7 Observation Report—Unsolicited (ORU) transactions (also referred to as an HL7 ORU^R01 message) The HL7 provides messaging templates to support communication of observations, orders, laboratory data, pharmaceutical information, demographics, etc SaigonTech – Engineering Division
11
11 ORU message example The ORU is termed an R01 Event, to coincide with its use for transmitting laboratory results to tertiary systems While the object is laboratory results, the R01 event is oftentimes used as the primary message for communicating vitals transactions from a source system (in this case, a medical device) to an EMR SaigonTech – Engineering Division
12
12 SaigonTech – Engineering Division
13
13 The patient identification (PID) segment establishes the identity of the patient and associates information such as medical record number, patient number, name, and other associating information. An example of a typical PID segment is as follows: The following OBX segments represent examples of pulse (symbol: HR) and temperature (symbol: T): SaigonTech – Engineering Division
14
14 4. Other Medical Device Data We have focused on the communication of discrete event data: findings or values that are transmitted to the EMR In discussing data, the story is incomplete without addressing those data that are available at the point of care and which are used for real-time clinical diagnosis and intervention SaigonTech – Engineering Division
15
15 References Zalesky J.R. (2009) Integrating Device Data into the Electronic Medical Record: A Developer's Guide to Design and a Practitioner's Guide to Application. Publicis Publishing, Erlangen. SaigonTech – Engineering Division
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.