Guiding interoperable electronic health records through patient-sharing networks

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Abstract

Effective sharing of clinical information between care providers is a critical component of a safe, efficient health system. National data-sharing systems may be costly, politically contentious and do not reflect local patterns of care delivery. This study examines hospital attendances in England from 2013 to 2015 to identify instances of patient sharing between hospitals. Of 19.6 million patients receiving care from 155 hospital care providers, 130 million presentations were identified. On 14.7 million occasions (12%), patients attended a different hospital to the one they attended on their previous interaction. A network of hospitals was constructed based on the frequency of patient sharing between hospitals which was partitioned using the Louvain algorithm into ten distinct data-sharing communities, improving the continuity of data sharing in such instances from 0 to 65–95%. Locally implemented data-sharing communities of hospitals may achieve effective accessibility of clinical information without a large-scale national interoperable information system.

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Clarke, J. M., Warren, L. R., Arora, S., Barahona, M., & Darzi, A. W. (2018). Guiding interoperable electronic health records through patient-sharing networks. Npj Digital Medicine, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41746-018-0072-y

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