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1.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 302: 68-72, 2023 May 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2323704

ABSTRACT

Availability and accessibility are important preconditions for using real-world patient data across organizations. To facilitate and enable the analysis of data collected at a large number of independent healthcare providers, syntactic- and semantic uniformity need to be achieved and verified. With this paper, we present a data transfer process implemented using the Data Sharing Framework to ensure only valid and pseudonymized data is transferred to a central research repository and feedback on success or failure is provided. Our implementation is used within the CODEX project of the German Network University Medicine to validate COVID-19 datasets at patient enrolling organizations and securely transfer them as FHIR resources to a central repository.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Humans , Semantics , Information Dissemination , Electronic Health Records
2.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ; 22(1): 335, 2022 12 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2196240

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The Federal Ministry of Education and Research of Germany (BMBF) funds a network of university medicines (NUM) to support COVID-19 and pandemic research at national level. The "COVID-19 Data Exchange Platform" (CODEX) as part of NUM establishes a harmonised infrastructure that supports research use of COVID-19 datasets. The broad consent (BC) of the Medical Informatics Initiative (MII) is agreed by all German federal states and forms the legal base for data processing. All 34 participating university hospitals (NUM sites) work upon a harmonised infrastructural as well as legal basis for their data protection-compliant collection and transfer of their research dataset to the central CODEX platform. Each NUM site ensures that the exchanged consent information conforms to the already-balloted HL7 FHIR consent profiles and the interoperability concept of the MII Task Force "Consent Implementation" (TFCI). The Independent Trusted Third-Party (TTP) of the University Medicine Greifswald supports data protection-compliant data processing and provides the consent management solutions gICS. METHODS: Based on a stakeholder dialogue a required set of FHIR-functionalities was identified and technically specified supported by official FHIR experts. Next, a "TTP-FHIR Gateway" for the HL7 FHIR-compliant exchange of consent information using gICS was implemented. A last step included external integration tests and the development of a pre-configured consent template for the BC for the NUM sites. RESULTS: A FHIR-compliant gICS-release and a corresponding consent template for the BC were provided to all NUM sites in June 2021. All FHIR functionalities comply with the already-balloted FHIR consent profiles of the HL7 Working Group Consent Management. The consent template simplifies the technical BC rollout and the corresponding implementation of the TFCI interoperability concept at the NUM sites. CONCLUSIONS: This article shows that a HL7 FHIR-compliant and interoperable nationwide exchange of consent information could be built using of the consent management software gICS and the provided TTP-FHIR Gateway. The initial functional scope of the solution covers the requirements identified in the NUM-CODEX setting. The semantic correctness of these functionalities was validated by project-partners from the Ludwig-Maximilian University in Munich. The production rollout of the solution package to all NUM sites has started successfully.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Electronic Health Records , Humans , Software , Informed Consent
3.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 294: 674-678, 2022 May 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1865433

ABSTRACT

COVID-19 has challenged the healthcare systems worldwide. To quickly identify successful diagnostic and therapeutic approaches large data sharing approaches are inevitable. Though organizational clinical data are abundant, many of them are available only in isolated silos and largely inaccessible to external researchers. To overcome and tackle this challenge the university medicine network (comprising all 36 German university hospitals) has been founded in April 2020 to coordinate COVID-19 action plans, diagnostic and therapeutic strategies and collaborative research activities. 13 projects were initiated from which the CODEX project, aiming at the development of a Germany-wide Covid-19 Data Exchange Platform, is presented in this publication. We illustrate the conceptual design, the stepwise development and deployment, first results and the current status.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Delivery of Health Care , Germany , Hospitals, University , Humans , Information Dissemination
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