Difference between revisions of "LII:The Comprehensive Guide to Physician Office Laboratory Setup and Operation/Data management"

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Data management in the [[physician office laboratory]] (POL) involves understanding workflows, choosing data management systems (like [[LIS]] or [[ELN]]), and applying best practices. This chapter talks about the common workflow and how data associated with it is better managed with [[informatics]] tools.
Data management in the [[physician office laboratory]] (POL) involves understanding workflows, choosing data management systems (like [[LIS]] or [[ELN]]), and applying best practices. This chapter talks about the common workflow and how data associated with it is better managed with [[informatics]] tools.


This fifth chapter on the topic of data management has seven sections.
This fourth chapter on the topic of data management has seven sections.


<div align="center">-----Return to [[LII:The Comprehensive Guide to Physician Office Laboratory Setup and Operation|the beginning]] of this guide-----</div>
<div align="center">-----Return to [[LII:The Comprehensive Guide to Physician Office Laboratory Setup and Operation|the beginning]] of this guide-----</div>
Line 7: Line 7:
==4. Data Management==
==4. Data Management==


===Functional requirements===
When considering the data management requirements for any business — from a car dealership to a clinical laboratory — the workflow of the business should be one of the primary starting points. This holds equally true for the [[physician office laboratory]] (POL). As such it's important to note where the POL is located in the broad scope of clinical workflow, which is directly in the analytic stage of the process, with a few pre-analytic and post-analytic tasks occurring directly before and after. As a reminder, here's the POL workflow diagram again from part one of this guide:
[[File:POLWorkflow.png|600px]]


===Functional requirements===
Inside this workflow are several other activities:
 
# '''Specimen collection''': The physician, nurse, or office assistant will go through the necessary procedures to collect what is needed for an ordered test. Some specimens such as intravenous blood and urine will require added collection procedures beyond easy-to-collect specimen types such as capillary blood.
# '''Specimen receiving''': In most cases the specimen doesn't require special transportation because collection is happening at the point of care. Additionally, the specimen may not require much handling, as in the case of collecting capillary blood from the finger bed for a determination of glucose levels via a hand-held meter. More complex samples not tested at the patient's side will require extra receiving procedures, however, including adding labeling and barcoding as well as entering the specimen in a data management system.
# '''Specimen preparation'''
# '''Aliquot'''
# '''Specimen processing and analysis'''
# '''Post-processing'''
# '''Reporting'''


The full LIS requirements questionnaire is included as an addendum to this guide. You can access it directly [[Laboratory information system (LIS) questionnaire|here]] or in the [[LII:The Comprehensive Guide to Physician Office Laboratory Setup and Operation/Additional Resources|Additional Resources]] section of the guide.


===Workflow and integration (EHR, HIS)===
===Workflow and integration (EHR, HIS)===

Revision as of 20:55, 26 August 2015

Data management in the physician office laboratory (POL) involves understanding workflows, choosing data management systems (like LIS or ELN), and applying best practices. This chapter talks about the common workflow and how data associated with it is better managed with informatics tools.

This fourth chapter on the topic of data management has seven sections.

-----Return to the beginning of this guide-----

4. Data Management

Functional requirements

When considering the data management requirements for any business — from a car dealership to a clinical laboratory — the workflow of the business should be one of the primary starting points. This holds equally true for the physician office laboratory (POL). As such it's important to note where the POL is located in the broad scope of clinical workflow, which is directly in the analytic stage of the process, with a few pre-analytic and post-analytic tasks occurring directly before and after. As a reminder, here's the POL workflow diagram again from part one of this guide: POLWorkflow.png

Inside this workflow are several other activities:

  1. Specimen collection: The physician, nurse, or office assistant will go through the necessary procedures to collect what is needed for an ordered test. Some specimens such as intravenous blood and urine will require added collection procedures beyond easy-to-collect specimen types such as capillary blood.
  2. Specimen receiving: In most cases the specimen doesn't require special transportation because collection is happening at the point of care. Additionally, the specimen may not require much handling, as in the case of collecting capillary blood from the finger bed for a determination of glucose levels via a hand-held meter. More complex samples not tested at the patient's side will require extra receiving procedures, however, including adding labeling and barcoding as well as entering the specimen in a data management system.
  3. Specimen preparation
  4. Aliquot
  5. Specimen processing and analysis
  6. Post-processing
  7. Reporting

The full LIS requirements questionnaire is included as an addendum to this guide. You can access it directly here or in the Additional Resources section of the guide.

Workflow and integration (EHR, HIS)

Workflow and integration instruments

LIS as a center of workflow/full office integration

LIS relationship to other IT systems

Best practices and standard operating procedures

Other workflow requirements

References