2.Policy options for increasing the supply of transplantable kidneys in Singapore.
Singapore medical journal 2016;57(10):530-532
Kidney transplantation is the preferred treatment for eligible end-stage renal disease patients. However, the supply of donated kidneys has been consistently insufficient to meet the transplantation requirements of the population. In this paper, I discuss the feasibility of several policy options that engage potential donors or key individuals in a Singapore context, including financial and non-financial incentives for deceased/living organ donors and their families, improving actualisation rates of both donation after brain death, donation after cardiac death through quality improvement programmes and remuneration schemes, and a media platform for directed organ donation. I conclude by highlighting the most feasible policies to be considered.
Altruism
;
Health Policy
;
Humans
;
Kidney
;
surgery
;
Kidney Failure, Chronic
;
surgery
;
Kidney Transplantation
;
methods
;
Living Donors
;
Nephrectomy
;
Quality Improvement
;
Singapore
;
Tissue Donors
;
Tissue and Organ Harvesting
;
Tissue and Organ Procurement
3.Can we understand population healthcare needs using electronic medical records?
Jia Loon CHONG ; Lian Leng LOW ; Darren Yak Leong CHAN ; Yuzeng SHEN ; Thiri Naing THIN ; Marcus Eng Hock ONG ; David Bruce MATCHAR
Singapore medical journal 2019;60(9):446-453
INTRODUCTION:
The identification of population-level healthcare needs using hospital electronic medical records (EMRs) is a promising approach for the evaluation and development of tailored healthcare services. Population segmentation based on healthcare needs may be possible using information on health and social service needs from EMRs. However, it is currently unknown if EMRs from restructured hospitals in Singapore provide information of sufficient quality for this purpose. We compared the inter-rater reliability between a population segment that was assigned prospectively and one that was assigned retrospectively based on EMR review.
METHODS:
200 non-critical patients aged ≥ 55 years were prospectively evaluated by clinicians for their healthcare needs in the emergency department at Singapore General Hospital, Singapore. Trained clinician raters with no prior knowledge of these patients subsequently accessed the EMR up to the prospective rating date. A similar healthcare needs evaluation was conducted using the EMR. The inter-rater reliability between the two rating sets was evaluated using Cohen's Kappa and the incidence of missing information was tabulated.
RESULTS:
The inter-rater reliability for the medical 'global impression' rating was 0.37 for doctors and 0.35 for nurses. The inter-rater reliability for the same variable, retrospectively rated by two doctors, was 0.75. Variables with a higher incidence of missing EMR information such as 'social support in case of need' and 'patient activation' had poorer inter-rater reliability.
CONCLUSION
Pre-existing EMR systems may not capture sufficient information for reliable determination of healthcare needs. Thus, we should consider integrating policy-relevant healthcare need variables into EMRs.