ICMCC

the international council on medical & care compunetics

science pages

18
May, 2013
Saturday

Distribution of Problems, Medications and Lab Results in Electronic Health Records: The Pareto Principle at Work

Abstract

Background:
Many natural phenomena demonstrate power-law distributions, where very common items predominate. Problems, medications and lab results represent some of the most important data elements in medicine, but their overall distribution has not been reported.

Objective:
Our objective is to determine whether problems, medications and lab results demonstrate a power law distribution.

Methods:
Retrospective review of electronic medical record data for 100,000 randomly selected patients seen at least twice in 2006 and 2007 at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and its affiliated medical practices.

Results:
All three data types exhibited a power law distribution. The 12.5% most frequently used problems account for 80% of all patient problems, the top 11.8% of medications account for 80% of all medication orders and the top 4.5% of lab result types account for all lab results.

Conclusion:
These three data elements exhibited power law distributions with a small number of common items representing a substantial proportion of all orders and observations, which has implications for electronic health record design.

Wright A, Bates DW. Distribution of Problems, Medications and Lab Results in Electronic Health Records: The Pareto Principle at Work. ACI. 2010 3;1(1):32-37.

8 April 2010

Bibliographic Data

Title:

Distribution of Problems, Medications and Lab Results in Electronic Health Records: The Pareto Principle at Work

Author(s):

Wright, Adam; Bates, David W.

Journal

Applied Clinical Informatics, 1(1), pp. 32-37
(2010-03-19)

URL:

Full article

DOI:

10.4338/ACI-2009-12-RA-0023

Keyword(s):

Data Mining, Electronic Health Records, Laboratory Results, Medication, United States

Citation:
Wright A, Bates DW. Distribution of Problems, Medications and Lab Results in Electronic Health Records: The Pareto Principle at Work. ACI. 2010 3;1(1):32-37.

Other Publications

In ICMCC Database

All Applied Clinical Informatics articles (13).

Other article(s) by

Adam Wright (15).

David W. Bates (60).

Discussion




cheap generic viagra

Back to Science Pages

Back to News Page

Miscellaneous

Affiliated University Institutes

Harvard Medical School, USA

Brigham and Women's Hospital, USA

Related science in ICMCC Database

The state of regional health information organizations: current activities and financing
Adler-Milstein J et al, Health Affairs, 27(1), 2008

Electronic health records in ambulatory care–a national survey of physicians
DesRoches, Catherine et al, N Engl J Med, 359(1), 2008-07-03

PubMed

Adam Wright
David W. Bates

Google Scholar

Adam Wright
David W. Bates

subscribe

ICMCC is member of

IFMBE

WABT

© ICMCC 2004-2011

Log in