Boston-based Mass General Brigham assigned a team of researchers to
comb through COVID-19 patient data in the EHR, a process that can take
up to eight hours for a single patient, before sending it off to global
researchers, according to STAT.
Ann Woolley, MD, an infectious disease physician at Mass General
Brigham who leads one of the health system’s COVID-19 patient data
teams, assembled a team of eight research assistants for the project.
Over the past several weeks, the team has manually sorted through
patient record charts for data including demographics, risk factors,
exposures, medications and chest scans.
Mass General Brigham’s biobank partnered with international
consortium of genetics researchers COVID-19 Host Genetics Initiative.
Health system researchers compile the COVID-19 patient data and upload
it to a software program that converts the data to a binary format for
the genetic researchers in the consortium. The initiative comprises more
than 150 programs similar to Mass General Brigham’s.
The health system has shared genetic data from 108 COVID-19 patients
as well as data from more than 31,000 controls who are believed to not
be infected but have not yet been tested, according to the report. The
control individuals had previously volunteered to have a blood sample
collected and their data analyzed by Mass General Brigham’s biobank, so
their information was already on file.
“As the numbers mount, the way that a DNA biobank is tied into an EHR
is extraordinarily powerful for teasing apart all sorts of questions
about clinical phenomenology, pathophysiology, and eventually even
treatment possibilities,” said Robert Green, MD, a medical geneticist
and physician at Mass General Brigham who is also helping lead the
project.
https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/ehrs/how-mass-general-brigham-is-extracting-sharing-data-from-ehr-for-covid-19-research.html
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