Author:
Canaway Rachel,Boyle Douglas,Manski-Nankervis Jo-Anne,Gray Kathleen
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Most people receive most of their health care in in Australia in primary care, yet researchers and policymakers have limited access to resulting clinical data. Widening access to primary care data and linking it with hospital or other data can contribute to research informing policy and provision of services and care; however, limitations of primary care data and barriers to access curtail its use. The Australian Health Research Alliance (AHRA) is seeking to build capacity in data-driven healthcare improvement; this study formed part of its workplan.
Methods
The study aimed to build capacity for data driven healthcare improvement through identifying primary care datasets in Australia available for secondary use and understand data quality frameworks being applied to them, and factors affecting national capacity for secondary use of primary care data from the perspectives of data custodians and users. Purposive and snowball sampling were used to disseminate a questionnaire and respondents were invited to contribute additional information via semi-structured interviews.
Results
Sixty-two respondents collectively named 106 datasets from eclectic sources, indicating a broad conceptualisation of what a primary care dataset available for secondary use is. The datasets were generated from multiple clinical software systems, using different data extraction tools, resulting in non-standardised data structures. Use of non-standard data quality frameworks were described by two-thirds of data custodians. Building trust between citizens, clinicians, third party data custodians and data end-users was considered by many to be a key enabler to improve primary care data quality and efficiencies related to secondary use. Trust building qualities included meaningful stakeholder engagement, transparency, strong leadership, shared vision, robust data security and data privacy protection. Resources to improve capacity for primary care data access and use were sought for data collection tool improvements, workforce upskilling and education, incentivising data collection and making data access more affordable.
Conclusions
The large number of identified Australian primary care related datasets suggests duplication of labour related to data collection, preparation and utilisation. Benefits of secondary use of primary care data were many, and strong national leadership is required to reach consensus on how to address limitations and barriers, for example accreditation of EMR clinical software systems and the adoption of agreed data and quality standards at all stages of the clinical and research data-use lifecycle. The study informed the workplan of AHRA’s Transformational Data Collaboration to improve partner engagement and use of clinical data for research.
Funder
Australian Government Medical Research Futures Fund (MRFF) Rapid Applied Research Translation Initiative 2.1 scheme via Melbourne Academic Centre for Health
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Health Informatics,Health Policy,Computer Science Applications
Reference81 articles.
1. Australian Bureau of Statistics. Patient experiences in Australia: summary of findings, 2019–20 financial year Canberra: Australian Bureau of Statistics; 2020 [cited 2020 3 January]. https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/health/health-services/patient-experiences-australia-summary-findings.
2. Canaway R, Boyle DI, Manski-Nankervis J-A, Bell J, Hocking J, Clarke K, et al. Gathering data for decisions: best practice use of primary care electronic records for research. Med J Aust. 2019;210:S12–6. https://doi.org/10.5694/mja2.50026.
3. Productivity Commission. Data availability and use: productivity commission inquiry report 2017 July 2018; (July):[64 p.]. https://www.pc.gov.au/inquiries/completed/data-access#report.
4. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. Review and evaluation of Australian information about primary health care: a focus on general practice. Canberra: AIHW; 2008. Contract No.: HWI 103.
5. Duckett S, Swerissen H. Building better foundations for primary care Melbourne: Grattan Institute; 2017. https://grattan.edu.au/report/building-better-foundations/.
Cited by
8 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献