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Next-Generation Registries: Fusion of Data for Care, and Research

Disease-based registries are a critical tool for electronic data capture of high-quality, gold standard data for clinical research as well as for population management in clinical care. Yet, a legacy of significant operational costs, resource requirements, and poor data liquidity have limited their...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mandl, Kenneth D., Edge, Stephen, Malone, Chad, Marsolo, Keith, Natter, Marc D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Medical Informatics Association 201
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3845739/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24303257
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author Mandl, Kenneth D.
Edge, Stephen
Malone, Chad
Marsolo, Keith
Natter, Marc D.
author_facet Mandl, Kenneth D.
Edge, Stephen
Malone, Chad
Marsolo, Keith
Natter, Marc D.
author_sort Mandl, Kenneth D.
collection PubMed
description Disease-based registries are a critical tool for electronic data capture of high-quality, gold standard data for clinical research as well as for population management in clinical care. Yet, a legacy of significant operational costs, resource requirements, and poor data liquidity have limited their use. Research registries have engendered more than $3 Billion in HHS investment over the past 17 years. Health delivery systems and Accountable Care Organizations are investing heavily in registries to track care quality and follow-up of patient panels. Despite the investment, regulatory and financial models have often enforced a “single purpose” limitation on each registry, restricting the use of data to a pre-defined set of protocols. The need for cost effective, multi-sourced, and widely shareable registry data sets has never been greater, and requires next-generation platforms to robustly support multi-center studies, comparative effectiveness research, post-marketing surveillance and disease management. This panel explores diverse registry efforts, both academic and commercial, that have been implemented in leading-edge clinical, research, and hybrid use cases. Panelists present their experience in these areas as well as lessons learned, challenges addressed, and near innovations and advances.
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spelling pubmed-38457392013-12-03 Next-Generation Registries: Fusion of Data for Care, and Research Mandl, Kenneth D. Edge, Stephen Malone, Chad Marsolo, Keith Natter, Marc D. AMIA Jt Summits Transl Sci Proc Articles Disease-based registries are a critical tool for electronic data capture of high-quality, gold standard data for clinical research as well as for population management in clinical care. Yet, a legacy of significant operational costs, resource requirements, and poor data liquidity have limited their use. Research registries have engendered more than $3 Billion in HHS investment over the past 17 years. Health delivery systems and Accountable Care Organizations are investing heavily in registries to track care quality and follow-up of patient panels. Despite the investment, regulatory and financial models have often enforced a “single purpose” limitation on each registry, restricting the use of data to a pre-defined set of protocols. The need for cost effective, multi-sourced, and widely shareable registry data sets has never been greater, and requires next-generation platforms to robustly support multi-center studies, comparative effectiveness research, post-marketing surveillance and disease management. This panel explores diverse registry efforts, both academic and commercial, that have been implemented in leading-edge clinical, research, and hybrid use cases. Panelists present their experience in these areas as well as lessons learned, challenges addressed, and near innovations and advances. American Medical Informatics Association 2013 -03- 18 /pmc/articles/PMC3845739/ /pubmed/24303257 Text en ©2013 AMIA - All rights reserved.
spellingShingle Articles
Mandl, Kenneth D.
Edge, Stephen
Malone, Chad
Marsolo, Keith
Natter, Marc D.
Next-Generation Registries: Fusion of Data for Care, and Research
title Next-Generation Registries: Fusion of Data for Care, and Research
title_full Next-Generation Registries: Fusion of Data for Care, and Research
title_fullStr Next-Generation Registries: Fusion of Data for Care, and Research
title_full_unstemmed Next-Generation Registries: Fusion of Data for Care, and Research
title_short Next-Generation Registries: Fusion of Data for Care, and Research
title_sort next-generation registries: fusion of data for care, and research
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3845739/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24303257
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