scholarly journals Online patológiai vizsgálatkérő felület létrehozása a Semmelweis Egyetemen

2021 ◽  
Vol 162 (49) ◽  
pp. 1962-1967

Összefoglaló. Bevezetés: Az I. Patológiai és Kísérleti Rákkutató Intézet – a Semmelweis Egyetemen belüli diagnosztikai szolgáltatásnyújtás mellett – kiterjedt külső partneri hálózattal (vizsgálatmegrendelővel) bír. Az Intézet a napi működése során párhuzamosan használja az egyetem központi informatikai rendszerét, valamint belső, folyamattámogató alkalmazását (workflow management). A külsős partnerek hozzáférése vizsgálatfeladásra az egyetemi központi informatikai rendszerhez nincs biztosítva. A vizsgálatok rendelése papíralapú, a minta érkeztetésekor a klinikai adatok rögzítése manuális, kifejezetten humánerőforrás-igényes. Célkitűzés: Célunk volt a patológiai minták regisztrációjának egyszerűsítése és felgyorsítása, az adminisztratív folyamatok hatékonyságának javítása. Módszer: A kitűzött célt a minőségfejlesztésből ismert Plan-Do-Check-Act (Tervezés-Cselekvés-Ellenőrzés-Beavatkozás) ciklus módszereit alkalmazva kívántuk elérni, online, a mintavétel helyén elérhető, a meglévő belső folyamattámogató alkalmazáshoz kapcsolódó, szakterület-specifikus vizsgálatkérő felület kifejlesztésével. Eredmények: A vizsgálati minták regisztrációjának átlagos ideje 65%-kal csökkent az online vizsgálatkérő rendszerhez csatlakozott klinikai partnerek körében. Megbeszélés: Az elmúlt években tapasztalható volt, hogy kisebb, nem hatékonyan működtethető patológiai osztályok megszűntek, részben vagy egészben beolvadtak nagyobb diagnosztikai egységekbe. A humánerőforrás-problémák (elöregedő szakma a patológia) a fenti folyamatot minden bizonnyal tovább erősítik. Várható, hogy a nagyobb patológiai osztályokon a következő években a mintaszám tovább növekszik, a vizsgálatkérések egyre nagyobb hányada érkezik majd intézményen kívülről. Következtetés: A patológiai informatika fejlesztésekor figyelembe kell venni, hogy szükséges már a mintavétel helyén biztosítani az informatikai támogatást a minta nyomon követéséhez, nem elégséges csak a laboron belüli folyamatok kiszolgálása. Orv Hetil. 2021; 162(49): 1962–1967. Summary. Introduction: The 1st Department of Pathology and Experimental Cancer Research, Semmelweis University (Budapest, Hungary) has a broad network of clinical partners, many of which are non-university hospitals. A separate hospital information system and a local laboratory workflow management system is used at the Department. University clinics use the hospital information system for electronic requesting of tests. Non-university partners have no access to the systems, requesting tests is paper-based, registration of the requests at the pathology lab is manual and laborious. Objective: Our main objective was to improve the efficiency of the sample registration step of the pathology workflow. Method: Applying the Plan-Do-Check-Act procedure, a quality improvement project has been carried out and an online, subspecialty-based requesting application tool, interfaced with the current laboratory information system, was developed. Results: The average sample registration time improved with 65% among the early user partners. Discussion: The past years have shown smaller, inefficient pathology labs decreasing in number and integrated into larger regional diagnostic centers. Both issues of efficiency and quality assurance and problems rooted in human resources are drivers of further centralisation. The numbers of test requests and samples from non in-house partners are expected to be increased in the pathology labs in the future. Conclusion: Efficient and safe sample tracking has to start at the site of sample acquisition. State of the art laboratory information systems should support this expansion of competence. Orv Hetil. 2021; 162(49): 1962–1967.

1995 ◽  
Vol 34 (04) ◽  
pp. 378-396 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Winter ◽  
R. Haux

Abstract:Information processing in hospitals, especially in university hospitals, is currently faced with two major issues: low-cost hardware and progress in networking technology leads to a further decentralization of computing capacity, due to the increasing need for information processing in hospitals and due to economic restrictions, it is necessary to use, commercial software products. This leads to heterogeneous hospital information systems using a variety of software and hardware products, and to a stronger demand for integrating these products and, in general, for a dedicated methodology for the management of hospital information systems to support patient care and medical research. We present a three-level graph-based model (3LGM) to support the systematic management of hospital information systems. 3LGM can serve as a basis for assessing the quality of information processing in hospitals. 3LGM distinguishes between a procedural level for describing the information procedures (and their information interchange) of a hospital information system and thus its functionality, a logical tool level, focusing on application systems and communication links, and a physical tool level with physical subsystems (e.g., computer systems) and data transmission. The examples that are presented have been taken from the Heidelberg University Hospital Information System.


1974 ◽  
Vol 13 (03) ◽  
pp. 125-140 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ch. Mellner ◽  
H. Selajstder ◽  
J. Wolodakski

The paper gives a report on the Karolinska Hospital Information System in three parts.In part I, the information problems in health care delivery are discussed and the approach to systems design at the Karolinska Hospital is reported, contrasted, with the traditional approach.In part II, the data base and the data processing system, named T1—J 5, are described.In part III, the applications of the data base and the data processing system are illustrated by a broad description of the contents and rise of the patient data base at the Karolinska Hospital.


1987 ◽  
Vol 26 (04) ◽  
pp. 189-194
Author(s):  
S. S. El-Gamal

SummaryModern information technology offers new opportunities for the storage and manipulation of hospital information. A computer-based hospital information system, dedicated to urology and nephrology, was designed and developed in our center. It involves in principle the employment of a program that allows the analysis of non-restricted, non-codified texts for the retrieval and processing of clinical data and its operation by non-computer-specialized hospital staff.This Hospital Information System now plays a vital role in the efficient provision of a good quality service and is used in daily routine and research work in this hospital. This paper describes this specialized Hospital Information System.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinyao Ni ◽  
Junwu Zhang ◽  
Yanxia Chen ◽  
Weizhong Wang ◽  
Jinlin Liu

Abstract Background Good's syndrome (GS) is a rare secondary immunodeficiency disease presenting as thymoma and hypogammaglobulinemia. Due to its rarity, the diagnosis of GS is often missed. Methods We used the hospital information system to retrospectively screen thymoma and hypogammaglobulinemia patients at the First Affiliated Hospital of Wenzhou Medical University from Apr 2012 to Apr 2020. The clinical, laboratory, treatment, and outcome data for these patients were collected and analyzed. Results Among the 181 screened thymoma patients, 5 thymoma patients with hypogammaglobulinemia were identified; 3 patients had confirmed diagnoses of GS, and the other 2 did not have a diagnosis of GS recorded in the hospital information system. A retrospective review of the clinical characteristics, laboratory results, and follow-up data for these 2 undiagnosed patients confirmed the diagnosis of GS. All 5 GS patients presented with pneumonia, 2 patients presented with recurrent skin abscesses, 2 patients presented with recurrent cough and expectoration, 1 patient presented with recurrent oral lichen planus and diarrhea, and 1 patient presented with tuberculosis and granulomatous epididymitis. In the years after the diagnosis of hypogammaglobulinemia with mild symptoms, all 5 patients had received irregular intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) treatment. As the course of the disease progressed, the clinical symptoms of all patients worsened, but the symptoms were partly resolved with IVIG in these patients. However, 4 patients died due to comorbidities. Conclusion GS should be investigated as a possible diagnosis in thymoma patients who present with hypogammaglobulinemia, especially those with recurrent opportunistic infections, recurrent skin abscesses, chronic diarrhea, or recurrent lichen planus.


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