Abstract
Real-word data (RWD) refer to data relating to patient health status and/or the delivery of health care routinely collected from a variety of sources, including electronic health records, medical claims data, and patient-generated data. Data sets that combine personal health data stored in different sources can provide a more complete picture of an individual's health and can be used to improve population health through research and practice. The 2-tiered aim of this article is to provide a brief introduction to using RWD in health care research and to present a case study that demonstrates data curation and data merge from different sources while highlighting the benefits and limitations of using RWD. The current digital health ecosystem and value-based care approach highlight the need to use RWD to catalyze the advancement of health care research and practice. This is an excellent field that nurse researchers can lead, as they have an innate understanding of such data and data sources.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Reference25 articles.
1. Rapid response to COVID-19: health informatics support for outbreak management in an academic health system;Reeves;J Am Med Inform Assoc,2020
2. A harmonized data quality assessment terminology and framework for the secondary use of electronic health record data;Kahn;EGEMS (Wash DC),2016
3. A data quality assessment guideline for electronic health record data reuse;Weiskopf;EGEMS (Wash DC),2017
4. A data quality ontology for the secondary use of EHR data;Johnson;AMIA Annu Symp Proc,2015
5. Actual causes of death in the United States;McGinnis;JAMA,1993