© 2013 Denver Health
Business Intelligence (BI): A System to Improve HIV Surveillance and Care C Mettenbrink, L Snyder, A Davidson, E Gardner, E McCormick, D McEwen, M Thrun
Denver Public Health, Denver, USA
• More than half of all HIV individuals in Colorado live in Denver.
• 45% of all new HIV cases in 2013 were diagnosed in Denver.
• 90% of all new HIV cases are successfully linked to care, although poorly retained in care.
• Denver Public Health (DPH) recognized a business need for an IT solution that could manage multiple data sources and support comprehensive HIV surveillance and treatment that would start at diagnosis and follow through to receipt of care and the achievement of an undetectable viral load.
Background
*
Results
• Requirements gathering sessions with stakeholders allowed developers to gain a better understanding of current and future surveillance needs.
• Stakeholders and developers met frequently during
the development process to provide input. • Sufficient planning time was allocated to define
requirements, translate those requirements into detailed data documents and wireframe dashboards, perform data quality and validation, gain feedback during the development cycles, and testing and bug fixes prior to final release.
• Demographic, geographic, and HIV specific data were
integrated from multiple healthcare sources and included clinical visits, viral load, and CD4 counts.
• Data was assessed for cleanliness, accuracy, and
where necessary, surrogates developed before storing in the BI data model.
Methods
Conclusions
Implications
Contact Information : For more information or for additional copies of this abstract, contact Christie Mettenbrink at [email protected]
TIPS FOR POSTERS: [Do not adjust this area. It is outside the visible box and will not print] See “Making a Scientific Meeting Presentation” by D. Runyon
Title: • Big and Bold, but short • Include scope, study design &
goal, not conclusions
Authorship: • Rank list of contributors • First author is presenter • Full names & credentials
Methods: • This section most likely to be
incomplete • Include design, setting,
randomization, sample, as applicable
Size: Start by making the poster the correct dimensions [Design>Page Setup] based on the conference requirements. One side must be less than 44 inches to print correctly.
Conclusions: • Why your study is important and
what does it mean? • Comment only on the data • Avoid passive voice
Tables & figures: • Include short narrative below
each table or figure to highlight/elaborate on the key findings.
Top level provides population overview
HIV Dashboard
HIV Surveillance Summary – Denver County Incident HIV Summary – Denver County
Linkage to Care Summary – Denver County Community Viral Load – Denver County Topic-specific pages describe stages of the
continuum of care
Retention in Care Summary – Denver County HIV Care Summary – Denver Health
User –selected parameters tailor reports to specific
queries
• To describe the process for developing a business intelligence tool to monitor real-time HIV.
Objectives
• The resulting Business Intelligence solution integrated multiple data sources including eHARs, Expanded CD4 and viral load result data, HIV positive registry data, and EMR from one healthcare provider.
• Utilizing an on-line dashboard of charts, graphs, and
GIS mapping tools, users have real-time data access to monitor disease burden and linkage and retention in care.
• This user-defined dashboard allows users with appropriate need and security clearance to drill down to patient level data to generate lists for clinical and public health outreach purposes.
• A Successful project requires documenting detailed requirements, performing and addressing data quality issues, end-user testing and feedback, and ongoing communication between developers, stakeholders, and informatics staff.
• The resulting BI tool allows: • The assessment and monitoring across the
spectrum of HIV disease.
• Creates opportunities for prevention practitioners and policy makers to better understand current and future data needs to better direct resources.
• By utilizing a BI technology, health departments and clinicians can:
• Better target prevention and programming
• Maintain the capacity to intervene in a more
directed manner with the HIV-infected community and care providers along the continuum of care (diagnosis through linkage to care, retention in care, and viral load suppression) helping to evaluate where intervene in a more directed manner with the HIV-infected community