Timeliness of Chlamydia Laboratory and Provider Reports: A Modern Perspective

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Date
2015-04-17
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American English
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Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research
Abstract

Timeliness of reports sent by laboratories and providers is a continuous challenge for disease surveillance and management. Public health organizations often collect communicable disease reports with various degrees of timeliness raising the concern about the delay in patient information received. Timely reports are beneficial to accurately evaluate community health needs and investigate disease outbreaks. According to Indiana state law, chlamydia reports are required to be sent to public health within 3 days after a positive test result confirmation. Therefore, laboratories and providers must be accountable and comply with regulation to ensure accurate data quality of disease assessment. The objective of this research study is to analyze the time delay between a chlamydia positive test diagnosis and when a laboratory and/or a provider send a report to a local public health department. A sample of 2,428 chlamydia laboratory and provider reports were collected during the period from May 2012 through July 2012 from a local health department serving the Indianapolis area. Due to absence of test confirmation dates, dates that a report is sent to public health, and other missing data, only 1,752 reports were included in this study. The time delay was calculated by determining the difference between when the initial report is sent to public health following positive confirmatory test by the laboratory. Reports were differentiated as either a laboratory report or a provider report coming directly from a clinician or a hospital setting. Statistical analyses and frequency tables were conducted using SAS 9.4. Table 1 displays the counts of chlamydia laboratory and provider reports according to the time delay in days, the percentage of reports sent to public health within 3 days, and the summary statistics for the two types of reports with a graphical representation shown in Figure 1. There is a clear lag between a lab test and when a provider report is sent to public health. Negative binomial regression result was highly significant with p < 0.001. This study shows the importance of continuing to examine the timeliness of disease reporting from both laboratory and provider settings. Most lab reports are received electronically and comply with state law. However, reports from providers tend to be fax-based and received later than the 72 hours desired by health officials. Given greater adoption electronic health records, it might be possible to further enhance disease surveillance through more timely provider-based reporting, which could also reduce the volume of missing data from provider reports like observed with ELR. Future research should examine EHR capacity and clinical workflows to improve provider-based reporting processes.

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Patrick T.S. Lai, Janae E. Johns, Uzay Kirbiyik, and B. E. Dixon. 2015 April 17. Timeliness of Chlamydia Laboratory and Provider Reports: A Modern Perspective. Poster session presented at IUPUI Research Day 2015, Indianapolis, Indiana.
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