DEEDS Writing Committee.
Ann Emerg Med. 1998 Feb;31(2):264-273. doi: 10.1016/S0196-0644(98)70317-8. Epub 2005 Nov 2.
See editorial, p 274. Variations in the way that data are entered in emergency department record systems impede the use of ED records for direct patient care and deter their reuse for many other legitimate purposes. To foster more uniform ED data, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for Injury Prevention and Control is coordinating a public-private partnership that has developed recommended specifications for many observations, actions, instructions, conclusions, and identifiers that are entered in ED records. The partnership's initial product, Data Elements for Emergency Department Systems, Release 1.0 (DEEDS), is intended for use by individuals and organizations responsible for ED record systems. If the recommended specifications are widely adopted, then problems-such as data incompatibility and high costs of collecting, linking, and using data-can be substantially reduced. The collaborative effort that led to DEEDS, Release 1.0 sets a precedent for future review and revision of the initial recommendations. [DEEDS Writing Committee: Data Elements for Emergency Department Systems, Release 1.0 (DEEDS): A summary report. Ann Emerg Med February 1998;31:264-273.].
参见社论,第 274 页。由于在急诊记录系统中输入数据的方式存在差异,这阻碍了 ED 记录在直接患者护理中的使用,并阻止了 ED 记录在许多其他合法用途中的重复使用。为了促进更统一的 ED 数据,疾病控制与预防中心的国家伤害预防与控制中心正在协调一个公私合作伙伴关系,该关系已经为许多在 ED 记录中输入的观察结果、操作、指令、结论和标识符制定了推荐规范。合作伙伴关系的初始产品,急诊部门系统数据元素,版本 1.0(DEEDS),旨在供负责 ED 记录系统的个人和组织使用。如果推荐的规范得到广泛采用,那么数据不兼容和数据收集、链接和使用成本高的问题可以得到大大减少。导致 DEEDS 版本 1.0 的协作努力为未来对初始建议的审查和修订奠定了先例。[DEEDS 写作委员会:急诊部门系统数据元素,版本 1.0(DEEDS):总结报告。《急诊医学年鉴》1998 年 2 月;31:264-273。]。