Abstract
Computable medical records, readable by both human and machine, will house a patient’s entire record from conception to death. Importantly, such records will declare their fidelity level — their degree of completeness and accuracy — so that users can not only identify what data is there, but also what’s missing.
The computable medical record will be unique, enabling users to find the right record for the right person; will support a health status scoring system; and will ideally be open source to drive adoption across software vendors, hospital systems, and government.
Language | English |
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Place of Publication | Glasgow |
Number of pages | 29 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 21 Dec 2015 |
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Keywords
- electronic health records
- EHRs
- computable phenotyping
Cite this
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Computable Records : The Next Generation of the EMR Conversation . / Rimpilainen, Sanna.
Glasgow, 2015. 29 p.Research output: Book/Report › Other report
TY - BOOK
T1 - Computable Records
T2 - The Next Generation of the EMR Conversation
AU - Rimpilainen, Sanna
PY - 2015/12/21
Y1 - 2015/12/21
N2 - In 2016 and onward, computable medical records will fuel the next generation of EHRs, as the quest for interoperable, portable, and comprehensive health data continues.Computable medical records, readable by both human and machine, will house a patient’s entire record from conception to death. Importantly, such records will declare their fidelity level — their degree of completeness and accuracy — so that users can not only identify what data is there, but also what’s missing. The computable medical record will be unique, enabling users to find the right record for the right person; will support a health status scoring system; and will ideally be open source to drive adoption across software vendors, hospital systems, and government.
AB - In 2016 and onward, computable medical records will fuel the next generation of EHRs, as the quest for interoperable, portable, and comprehensive health data continues.Computable medical records, readable by both human and machine, will house a patient’s entire record from conception to death. Importantly, such records will declare their fidelity level — their degree of completeness and accuracy — so that users can not only identify what data is there, but also what’s missing. The computable medical record will be unique, enabling users to find the right record for the right person; will support a health status scoring system; and will ideally be open source to drive adoption across software vendors, hospital systems, and government.
KW - electronic health records
KW - EHRs
KW - computable phenotyping
U2 - 10.17868/65384
DO - 10.17868/65384
M3 - Other report
BT - Computable Records
CY - Glasgow
ER -