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ResearchPaper zugänglich unter
URN: urn:nbn:de:bvb:29-opus-32089
URL: http://www.opus.ub.uni-erlangen.de/opus/volltexte/2012/3208/


DEUS: Distributed Electronic Patient File Update System

Neumann, Christoph P. ; Rampp, Florian ; Lenz, Richard

pdf-Format:
Dokument 1.pdf (1.079 KB)


SWD-Schlagwörter: Elektronische Patientenakte , Krankenunterlagen , Publish-Subscribe-System , Systemintegration , Dokumentenverwaltungssystem
Freie Schlagwörter (Englisch): healthcare , system integration , inter-institutional , document-orientation , publish-subscribe
CCS - Klassifikation: C.2.4 , D.2.11 , D.2.13 , J.3
Fakultät: Technische Fakultät
DDC-Sachgruppe: Informatik
Dokumentart: ResearchPaper
Schriftenreihe: Technical reports / Department Informatik, ISSN 2191-5008
Bandnummer: CS-2012,2
Sprache: Englisch
Erstellungsjahr: 2012
Publikationsdatum: 28.03.2012
Kurzfassung in Englisch: Inadequate availability of patient information is a major cause for medical errors and affects costs in healthcare. Traditional approaches to information integration in healthcare do not solve the problem. Applying a document-oriented paradigm to systems integration enables inter-institutional information exchange in healthcare. The goal of the proposed architecture is to provide information exchange between strict autonomous healthcare institutions, bridging the gap between primary and secondary care.
In a long-term healthcare data distribution scenario, the patient has to maintain sovereignty over any personal health information. Thus, the traditional publish-subscribe architecture is extended by a phase of human mediation within the data flow. DEUS essentially decouples the roles of information author and information publisher into distinct actors, resulting in a triangular data flow. The interaction scenario will be motivated. The significance of human mediation will be discussed. DEUS provides a carefully distinguished actor and role model for mediated pub-sub. The data flow between the participants is factored into distinct phases of information interchange. The artefact model is decomposed into role-dependent constituent parts. Both a domain specific (healthcare) terminology and a generic terminology is provided. From a technical perspective, the system design is presented. The sublayer for network transfer will be highlighted as well as the subsystem for human-machine interaction.


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Letzte Änderung: 01.11.10