TY - JOUR
T1 - The qualculative dimension of healthcare data interoperability
AU - Pine, Kathleen
N1 - Funding Information: The author thanks Christine Wolf, Melissa Mazmanian, Yunan Chen, and Gunnar Ellingsen, who helped shape the conceptual thinking for this paper, and Mary Pauline Lowry, who contributed to data collection and data management. She also thanks all the participants and key informants. The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: The study was supported by the National Science Foundation (grant no. 1319897) and the Intel Science and Technology Center for Social Computing. Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2019.
PY - 2019/9/1
Y1 - 2019/9/1
N2 - Research on interoperability and information exchange between information technology systems touts the use of secondary data for a variety of purposes, including research, management, quality improvement, and accountability. However, many studies have pointed out that this is difficult to achieve in practice. Hence, this article aims to examine the causes for this by reporting an ethnographic study of the data work performed by medical records coders and birth certificate clerks working in a hospital system to uncover the practices of creating administrative data (e.g. secondary data). The article illustrates that clerks and coders use situated qualitative judgments of the accuracy and authority of different primary medical accounts. Coders and clerks also employ their understandings of the importance of different future uses of data as they make crucial decisions about how much discretion to exercise in producing accurate data and how much effort to put toward clarifying problematic medical data. These findings suggest that information technology systems designed for interoperability and secondary data also need to be designed in ways that support the qualculative practices of data workers in order to succeed, including making future uses of data clear to data workers and finding ways to minimize conflicting data before data workers encounter it.
AB - Research on interoperability and information exchange between information technology systems touts the use of secondary data for a variety of purposes, including research, management, quality improvement, and accountability. However, many studies have pointed out that this is difficult to achieve in practice. Hence, this article aims to examine the causes for this by reporting an ethnographic study of the data work performed by medical records coders and birth certificate clerks working in a hospital system to uncover the practices of creating administrative data (e.g. secondary data). The article illustrates that clerks and coders use situated qualitative judgments of the accuracy and authority of different primary medical accounts. Coders and clerks also employ their understandings of the importance of different future uses of data as they make crucial decisions about how much discretion to exercise in producing accurate data and how much effort to put toward clarifying problematic medical data. These findings suggest that information technology systems designed for interoperability and secondary data also need to be designed in ways that support the qualculative practices of data workers in order to succeed, including making future uses of data clear to data workers and finding ways to minimize conflicting data before data workers encounter it.
KW - collaborative work practices and IT
KW - databases and data mining
KW - electronic health records
KW - information and knowledge management
KW - quality control
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U2 - 10.1177/1460458219833095
DO - 10.1177/1460458219833095
M3 - Article
C2 - 31002277
SN - 1460-4582
VL - 25
SP - 536
EP - 548
JO - Health informatics journal
JF - Health informatics journal
IS - 3
ER -