» Articles » PMID: 30016815

Smart Medical Information Technology for Healthcare (SMITH)

Abstract

Introduction: This article is part of the Focus Theme of Methods of Information in Medicine on the German Medical Informatics Initiative. "Smart Medical Information Technology for Healthcare (SMITH)" is one of four consortia funded by the German Medical Informatics Initiative (MI-I) to create an alliance of universities, university hospitals, research institutions and IT companies. SMITH's goals are to establish Data Integration Centers (DICs) at each SMITH partner hospital and to implement use cases which demonstrate the usefulness of the approach.

Objectives: To give insight into architectural design issues underlying SMITH data integration and to introduce the use cases to be implemented.

Governance And Policies: SMITH implements a federated approach as well for its governance structure as for its information system architecture. SMITH has designed a generic concept for its data integration centers. They share identical services and functionalities to take best advantage of the interoperability architectures and of the data use and access process planned. The DICs provide access to the local hospitals' Electronic Medical Records (EMR). This is based on data trustee and privacy management services. DIC staff will curate and amend EMR data in the Health Data Storage.

Methodology And Architectural Framework: To share medical and research data, SMITH's information system is based on communication and storage standards. We use the Reference Model of the Open Archival Information System and will consistently implement profiles of Integrating the Health Care Enterprise (IHE) and Health Level Seven (HL7) standards. Standard terminologies will be applied. The SMITH Market Place will be used for devising agreements on data access and distribution. 3LGM for enterprise architecture modeling supports a consistent development process.The DIC reference architecture determines the services, applications and the standardsbased communication links needed for efficiently supporting the ingesting, data nourishing, trustee, privacy management and data transfer tasks of the SMITH DICs. The reference architecture is adopted at the local sites. Data sharing services and the market place enable interoperability.

Use Cases: The methodological use case "Phenotype Pipeline" (PheP) constructs algorithms for annotations and analyses of patient-related phenotypes according to classification rules or statistical models based on structured data. Unstructured textual data will be subject to natural language processing to permit integration into the phenotyping algorithms. The clinical use case "Algorithmic Surveillance of ICU Patients" (ASIC) focusses on patients in Intensive Care Units (ICU) with the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). A model-based decision-support system will give advice for mechanical ventilation. The clinical use case HELP develops a "hospital-wide electronic medical record-based computerized decision support system to improve outcomes of patients with blood-stream infections" (HELP). ASIC and HELP use the PheP. The clinical benefit of the use cases ASIC and HELP will be demonstrated in a change of care clinical trial based on a step wedge design.

Discussion: SMITH's strength is the modular, reusable IT architecture based on interoperability standards, the integration of the hospitals' information management departments and the public-private partnership. The project aims at sustainability beyond the first 4-year funding period.

Citing Articles

Automated sample annotation for diabetes mellitus in healthcare integrated biobanking.

Stolp J, Weber C, Ammon D, Scherag A, Fischer C, Kloos C Comput Struct Biotechnol J. 2024; 24:724-733.

PMID: 39668942 PMC: 11635603. DOI: 10.1016/j.csbj.2024.10.033.


Unlocking the Potential of Secondary Data for Public Health Research: Retrospective Study With a Novel Clinical Platform.

Gundler C, Gottfried K, Wiederhold A, Ataian M, Wurlitzer M, Gewehr J Interact J Med Res. 2024; 13:e51563.

PMID: 39353185 PMC: 11480676. DOI: 10.2196/51563.


Correlation between psychological traits and the use of smart medical services in young and middle-aged adults: An observational study.

Zhang H, Liu Y, Gu R World J Psychiatry. 2024; 14(8):1224-1232.

PMID: 39165550 PMC: 11331391. DOI: 10.5498/wjp.v14.i8.1224.


Secondary use of patient data within decentralized studies using the example of rare diseases in Germany: A data scientist's exploration of process and lessons learned.

Zoch M, Gierschner C, Andreeff A, Henke E, Sedlmayr M, Muller G Digit Health. 2024; 10:20552076241265219.

PMID: 39130526 PMC: 11316959. DOI: 10.1177/20552076241265219.


Uncovering Harmonization Potential in Health Care Data Through Iterative Refinement of Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources Profiles Based on Retrospective Discrepancy Analysis: Case Study.

Rosenau L, Behrend P, Wiedekopf J, Gruendner J, Ingenerf J JMIR Med Inform. 2024; 12:e57005.

PMID: 39042420 PMC: 11303887. DOI: 10.2196/57005.


References
1.
Staubert S, Winter A, Speer R, Loffler M . Designing a concept for an IT-infrastructure for an integrated research and treatment center. Stud Health Technol Inform. 2010; 160(Pt 2):1319-23. View

2.
Marincola F . Translational Medicine: A two-way road. J Transl Med. 2003; 1(1):1. PMC: 202357. DOI: 10.1186/1479-5876-1-1. View

3.
de With K, Allerberger F, Amann S, Apfalter P, Brodt H, Eckmanns T . Strategies to enhance rational use of antibiotics in hospital: a guideline by the German Society for Infectious Diseases. Infection. 2016; 44(3):395-439. PMC: 4889644. DOI: 10.1007/s15010-016-0885-z. View

4.
DeLisle S, South B, Anthony J, Kalp E, Gundlapallli A, Curriero F . Combining free text and structured electronic medical record entries to detect acute respiratory infections. PLoS One. 2010; 5(10):e13377. PMC: 2954790. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0013377. View

5.
Meineke F, Staubert S, Lobe M, Winter A . A comprehensive clinical research database based on CDISC ODM and i2b2. Stud Health Technol Inform. 2014; 205:1115-9. View