Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5718223 | Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2017 | 4 Pages |
Background/PurposeAlthough prohibitively labor intensive, manual data extraction (MDE) is the prevailing method used to obtain clinical research and quality improvement (QI) data. Automated data extraction (ADE) offers a powerful alternative. The purposes of this study were to 1) assess the feasibility of ADE from provider-authored outpatient documentation, and 2) evaluate the effectiveness of ADE compared to MDE.MethodsA prospective collection of data was performed on 90 ADE-templated notes (NÂ =Â 71 patients) evaluated in our bowel management clinic. ADE captured data were compared to 59 MDE notes (NÂ =Â 51) collected under an IRB-exempt review. Sixteen variables were directly comparable between ADE and MDE.ResultsMDE for 59 clinic notes (27 unique variables) took 6Â months to complete. ADE-templated notes for 90 clinic notes (154 unique variables) took 5Â min to run a research/QI report. Implementation of ADE included eight weeks of development and testing. Pre-implementation clinical documentation was similar to post-implementation documentation (5-10Â min).ConclusionsADE-templated notes allow for a 5-fold increase in clinically relevant data that can be captured with each encounter. ADE also results in real-time data extraction to a research/QI database that is easily queried. The immediate availability of these data, in a research-formatted spreadsheet, allows for rapid collection, analyses, and interpretation of the data.Level of evidenceIV.Type of studyRetrospective Study.