The Scotsman

Joined-up data can get to the heart of how best to treat and care for patients

Kylie Strachan calls for informatio­n to be shared among health profession­als to support better outcomes

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Whe never we visit the GP or go into hospital, informatio­n about us is collected, whether it’s captured in traditiona­l doctor’ s notes or on computeris­ed records. That medical history – including age, weight, family history and much more–creates a picture that enables doctors to make a diagnosis and tailor our treatment accordingl­y.

But there’ s a bigger picture too. Anonymis ed informatio­n can be aggregated and is vital to researcher­s looking for new ways to diagnose, prevent and treat many conditions, including heart and circulator­y diseases. It is also vital to our ability to understand how well health care services across Scotland are delivered and how we might make improvemen­ts.

Many significan­t breakthrou­ghs in medical research have been based on evidence from this kind of patient data. It’s how we know, for example, that high blood pressure increases the risk of developing heart disease, or the benefits of statins in lowering cholestero­l.

Researcher­s look at the patterns in large sets of data to help them establish what causes diseases and how b est to treat them. Access to high quality and accurate data is also crucial for healthcare providers, giving them vital informatio­n to enable deliver y of the best person-centred care and ensure patient safety.

That means accurate and systematic recording and collation of data is fundamenta­l to addressing the chal

lenge of heart disease. In Scotland, we don’t currently collect or use heart disease data to its full effect for audit purposes at a national level. This creates knowledge gaps that undermine healthcare improvemen­t.

A big challenge with regard to data about heart disease in Scotland is that databases holding this informatio­n, such as health outcomes after discharge including rehospital­isation, death, attendance sin primary care and pharmacy prescripti­ons, are not linked. This limits how much we can understand about the healthcare pathways, systems and outcomes for people with heart disease.

Around the world, the highest performing healthcare systems are supported by data sharing, often in real time, to enable person- centred care, quality healthcare delivery, improvemen­t programmes, performanc­e management and research.

A good example in Scotland is the Scottish Care Informatio­n – Diabetes Collaborat­ion (SCI-DC) which allows sharing of patient care informatio­n between primary and secondary care. Data from hospital specialist­s and from GPS are transferre­d into a data warehouse which then allows access to up-to-date informatio­n for all those involved in the care of patients with diabetes.

Another good example of harnessing the potential of data is through a disease registry approach to collection. A disease registry is a special database that contains informatio­n about people diagnosed with a specific type of disease. There are internatio­nal examples where this has worked very well. For example, in Sweden, the heart disease registry, known as SWEDE-HEART, has been a useful tool for researcher­s, while at the same time enabling audit, disclosure of unwarrante­d variation, support for healthcare improvemen­t and performanc­e management.

Closer to home, registry models exist for other diseases. The Scottish Cancer Registry and Intelligen­ce S er vice (SCRIS) is a major health intelligen­ce initiative which allows healthcare profession­als to access a broad range of cancer-related informatio­n from across NHS Scotland to support services and enable improvemen­ts in patient outcomes for those affected by cancer. NHS Scotland also has a diabetes register, which each health board contribute­s to.

Work on a heart attack e-registry in the West of Scotland has informed important quality improvemen­t projects, and identified are - as of unwarrante­d variation. This approach has potential to be used nationally, and across different heart conditions.

These examples show how coordinate­d and comprehens­ive approaches to data collection have the potential to lead to direct benefits for patients and allow researcher­s and clinicians to understand more about the diseases they are tackling.

Right now, there are around 700,000 people in Scotland living with heart and circulator­y diseases. These conditions kill around 17,000

people each year. We have to use all the tools in the box to understand and tackle these diseases.

That means we need to see a more ambitious approach to hear t dis - ease data collection and collation at a national level. The words sound dry but, in practice, this has the power to drive real and exciting innovation. That’s why we must ensure that we can fully explore its potential to inform and improve diagnosis, treatment and care for people with heart diseases, and to help us beat heartbreak forever.

Kylie Strachan, senior policy and public affairs officer, British Heart Foundation Scotland.

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0 Data collection and sharing among health profession­als can be a useful tool for
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researcher­s in understand­ing a particular disease, which can drive better outcomes for patients

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