Fostering Governance and Information Partnerships for Chronic Disease Surveillance: The Multi-State EHR-Based Network for Disease Surveillance.

View Abstract

CONTEXT

Electronic health records (EHRs) are an emerging chronic disease surveillance data source and facilitating this data sharing is complex.

PROGRAM

Using the experience of the Multi-State EHR-Based Network for Disease Surveillance (MENDS), this article describes implementation of a governance framework that aligns technical, statutory, and organizational requirements to facilitate EHR data sharing for chronic disease surveillance.

IMPLEMENTATION

MENDS governance was cocreated with data contributors and health departments representing Texas, New Orleans, Louisiana, Chicago, Washington, and Indiana through engagement from 2020 to 2022. MENDS convened a governance body, executed data-sharing agreements, and developed a master governance document to codify policies and procedures.

RESULTS

The MENDS governance committee meets regularly to develop policies and procedures on data use and access, timeliness and quality, validation, representativeness, analytics, security, small cell suppression, software implementation and maintenance, and privacy. Resultant policies are codified in a master governance document.

DISCUSSION

The MENDS governance approach resulted in a transparent governance framework that cultivates trust across the network. MENDS's experience highlights the time and resources needed by EHR-based public health surveillance networks to establish effective governance.

Investigators
Abbreviation
J Public Health Manag Pract
Publication Date
2023-09-29
Volume
30
Issue
2
Page Numbers
244-254
Pubmed ID
38271106
Medium
Print-Electronic
Full Title
Fostering Governance and Information Partnerships for Chronic Disease Surveillance: The Multi-State EHR-Based Network for Disease Surveillance.
Authors
Kraus EM, Saintus L, Martinez AK, Brand B, Begley E, Merritt RK, Hamilton A, Rubin R, Sullivan A, Karras BT, Grannis S, Brooks IM, Mui JY, Carton TW, Hohman KH, Klompas M, Dixon BE