The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

COVID data-sharing system underutili­zed

- By Hiroyuki Umemoto and Akiko Minami

OSAKA — Medical facilities in some cities are not fully utilizing the centralize­d system to manage data on coronaviru­s patients, e Yomiuri Shimbun has learned.

Heavy workloads at public health centers have led to delays in contacting patients, raising the risk that patients whose symptoms have deteriorat­ed will get overlooked.

Medical facilities are required by law to submit reports on COVID-19 cases to public health centers, including patient names and the date of onset of symptom.

e reports were initially submitted via fax, but in a bid to quickly identify infected patients and reduce the burden on public health centers, the Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry launched the HERSYS system in May 2020, enabling medical facilities to log data directly.

However, medical facilities were also permitted to continue submitting reports via fax, with public health centers inputting

the data into the system on their behalf.

According to the ministry, 70% of the data has been logged directly by medical facilities, with public health centers handling the rest.

However, in 14 cities, including Yokohama, Kyoto, Osaka, Kobe, and Kitakyushu, the majority of public health centers entered the data on behalf of medical facilities, with the percentage exceeding 90% in some cities, according to a Yomiuri Shimbun survey of public health centers in 20 major cities.

Lack of personnel is believed to be a factor, as many clinics in urban areas are small. Among

the 14 major cities where public health centers did most of the data entry on behalf of medical facilities, nine exceeded the national average of 81.3 clinics per 100,000 people, with Osaka topping the list with 127.5.

e time and e ort required to input data are believed to be the main hurdles. ere are about 30 elds that need to be completed, and it takes about 5 minutes to enter data on each coronaviru­s patient. It takes time to get used to the system, and many doctors say handwritte­n forms are faster. e fact that medical facilities routinely use faxes to exchange patient informatio­n is also a factor.

During the 6th wave of the pandemic, when the daily number of new cases skyrockete­d, the burden on public health centers increased rapidly, and centers could not keep up with the workload, leading to delays in contacting patients.

In Osaka, the number of new cases topped 7,000 per day in January, four times higher than forecast. Data entry into HER-SYS for about 21,900 cases was delayed by up to eight days from Jan. 26 to Feb. 2, and from Feb. 4 to 7.

People whose infections had been con rmed were contacted by text messages if they were asymptomat­ic or had mild symptoms, but only a er their data had been entered into the system. When medical facilities sent data via fax, it took up to one week for text messages to be sent.

When data was sent via fax, patients with underlying medical conditions who were at risk of developing severe symptoms were contacted beforehand.

Although a city o cial said no cases had been reported of patients whose condition deteriorat­ed due to such delays, the risk was ever-present.

“We are taking the situation very seriously. We would like to ensure members know how to operate the system and encourage them to input informatio­n,” said an o cial of the Osaka Medical Associatio­n, which comprises medical practition­ers in the prefecture.

An o ce manager of Ichinona Clinic in Taisho Ward, Osaka, said, “e city and the medical associatio­n may need to dispatch personnel to help clinics that are short-sta ed with data entry.”

Data inputting was also delayed by several days in Kobe from late January to mid-February.

Contrastin­gly, 70% of medical facilities in Tokyo have been actively using the HER-SYS system.

Since January, medical facilities have been responsibl­e for monitoring the health of patients rather than public health centers. Facilities that input data into the system receive about ¥5,000 to ¥10,000 per patient as an incentive.

In Setagaya Ward, which has the largest population among the 23 wards in Tokyo, 50% of facilities were logging data directly in August. Since the introducti­on of cash incentives, that gure has risen to 70%. (April 3)

 ?? The Yomiuri Shimbun ?? An office manager of Ichinona Clinic logs in to the HER-SYS website at Ichinona Clinic in Taisho Ward, Osaka, on Feb. 24.
The Yomiuri Shimbun An office manager of Ichinona Clinic logs in to the HER-SYS website at Ichinona Clinic in Taisho Ward, Osaka, on Feb. 24.

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