Dictaphone to Demonstrate Multivendor, Cross-Organization Medical Record Data Sharing At HIMSS; Natural Language Processing Technology Converts Speech Recognized Dictation into Electronic Medical Record Data.SAN DIEGO San Diego (săn dēā`gō), city (1990 pop. 1,110,549), seat of San Diego co., S Calif., on San Diego Bay; inc. 1850. San Diego includes the unincorporated communities of La Jolla and Spring Valley. Coronado is across the bay. , Calif. -- At this year's Health Information and Management Systems Society Annual Conference and Exhibition, Dictaphone will show how its speech recognition and natural language processing Natural language processing Computer analysis and generation of natural language text. The goal is to enable natural languages, such as English, French, or Japanese, to serve either as the medium through which users interact with computer systems such as (NLP (Natural Language Processing) The capability of understanding human language. If the language is spoken, voice recognition plays an important role in converting the sounds to individual words. Then, natural language processing figures out what the words mean. ) software can be used to convert dictated patient information into data that can be seamlessly shared with almost any standards-based electronic health record (EHR (Electronic Health Records) Computerized medical records that bring patient care into the digital age and save time, money and lives. The push to adopt comprehensive electronic documentation between doctors' offices and hospital settings intensified after the RAND ) system. The demonstration will be part of a series of interoperability The capability of two or more hardware devices or two or more software routines to work harmoniously together. For example, in an Ethernet network, display adapters, hubs, switches and routers from different vendors must conform to the Ethernet standard and interoperate with each other. showcases presented by Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise IHE is an initiative by healthcare professionals and industry to improve the way computer systems in healthcare share information. In 1997, a consortium of radiologists and information technology experts formed IHE, or “Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise. (IHE IHE Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise IHE Institutions of Higher Education IHE International Institute for Infrastructural, Hydraulic and Environmental Engineering (historical acronym only, replaced by: IHE Delft, the Foundation) ), a global initiative that creates the framework for passing vital health information seamlessly -- from application to application, system to system, and setting to setting -- across multiple healthcare enterprises. This ability to pass information real-time between various applications is made possible by adherence to IHE's Cross Enterprise Sharing of Medical Summaries (XDS-MS) profile, an emerging industry interchange standard. Keith W. Boone, a senior consulting engineer for Dictaphone, serves as co-chair of the IHE Patient Care Coordination care coordination Managed care 1. The brokering of services for Pts to ensure that needs are met and services are not duplicated by the organizations involved in providing care 2. Technical Committee, which produced the XDS-MS profile, as well as editor of the Health Level 7 (HL7) Care Record Summaries Implementation Guide. In the demonstration, a "physician" will dictate a discharge report using Dictaphone's speech recognition software, which automatically converts voice to text. Dictaphone's proprietary NLP technology then works in the background to generate an HL7 Care Record Summary, which permits data to be exchanged with other EHR systems supplied by vendors participating in the showcase. "With interoperability a watchword in the dialogue on creating electronic health records and regional health information organizations, or RHIOs, Dictaphone is pleased to be supporting the development of these key information exchange standards," said Don Fallati, executive vice president of marketing for Dictaphone. "We believe our speech recognition and NLP technologies will play a crucial role in providing clinical documentation tools that will actually be used and preferred by physicians, while meeting the needs of the new standards-based environment." An estimated 50 percent or more of the patient chart is made up of dictated reports, the preferred physician documentation method. Rather than requiring physicians to change or anyone to manually enter discrete data elements into a software application (typical of most EMR (ElectroMagnetic Radiation) The emanation of energy from everything in the universe. Although the EMR from electrical and electronic devices is typically measured for practical, every-day situations, every object, including humans, emanates energy. systems), Dictaphone's NLP technology makes this dictated information rapidly available in a summarized data format. The technology analyzes and "reads" electronic text documents and extracts important medical facts, storing them in a database in structured data format along with a link to the section of the electronic report from which they were extracted. Testing has proved the high accuracy of NLP technology, which is based on computational linguistics computational linguistics (CL) Use of digital computers in linguistics research. The simplest examples are the use of computers to scan text and produce such aids as word lists, frequency counts, and concordances. . About Dictaphone Healthcare Solutions Group Dictaphone is the world's largest supplier of dictation, transcription and speech recognition systems and services that simplify and enhance the production and management of paperless electronic patient information. Through the integration of speech recognition and natural language processing within existing health information management workflow, Dictaphone systems are helping healthcare organizations save money and improve patient care by increasing the speed, accuracy and usability of their medical documentation. For more information, please visit www.dictaphone.com or call 1-888-350-4836. |
|

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion