This invention provides a very large, long term, universal, and global repository of health records for knowledge preservation, statistical sample analysis, and querying, without personally identifiable patient information. Embodiments of this invention provide a computerized system consisting of a very large number—thousands to billions—of health records, with long-term medical history—spanning several years to several decades—, obtained from diverse health care providers, stored in read-only mode in a global repository, without accessible personally identifiable patient information, and with the corresponding means to query, correlate, trend, and analyze the data.
Automated medical diagnosis systems and health record databases are typically defined and built with a specific application or medical condition goal. Typical constrained scope medical systems are shown, for example, in the following patents:
These systems all have their benefit and specific purpose, however there is a lack of global repository designed to accumulate medical health records over the long term, without any constraint on application, medical condition, or provider, and without storing—or with complete segregation of—personally identifiable information rendering the medical health records totally anonymous.
The present invention provides a means to capture knowledge and experience related to a very large number of health records over the long term. Whereas a physician or group of physicians can only accumulate a limited amount of knowledge and experience, typically limited to several hundreds to a few thousands of patients' health records, this invention provides the means to store millions of patients' health records and query, correlate, trend, and analyze these records.
The system, in order to keep the focus on the medical aspects of the health records, removes the personally identifiable patient information from the main repository therefore rendering the health records anonymous. For example, a patient's name, address, social security number, date of birth are removed.
It is thus a feature of at least one embodiment of the invention to maintain or extrapolate demographic and socio-economic information to provide critical context information for the health records. For example, age, income category, and zip code information is maintained or extrapolated.
Consequently the present invention includes a repository of anonymous health records.
In the invention, the system operates to:
An embodiment of this invention may host the above mentioned staging areas into completely segregated databases either located at the health providers' site or other secured and access restricted locations.
The system may compile health records from one or more health care providers, domestically and internationally, for storage in read-only mode in a global repository.
The system further operates to:
It is thus a feature of at least one embodiment of the invention for the repository to include one or more databases and one or more data warehouses of symptoms, diagnosis, analysis, prescriptions, side-effects, and medicines.
A system repository's embodiment may leverage the Unified Medical Language System and other pertinent data formatting or interface specifications as necessary to accept health record data feeds from providers.
Further, embodiments of this invention may include the capacity and scalability means to utilize this repository to preserve health records for knowledge and experience sharing via vertical scaling, horizontal scaling, co-location, or distribution of the computerized systems.
The invention further provides the means to perform large statistical sample analysis of health records based on any combination of the data stored and leveraging relevant methods such as statistical inference and descriptive statistics.
An embodiment of this invention may include the means to identify patterns and trends on small, middle, or large scale of health records, or any pertinent combination via the implementation of the relevant querying and analysis features.
It is thus a feature of at least one embodiment of the invention to provide analysis of the anonymous health records via: