History of the Rochester Epidemiology Project: half a century of medical records linkage in a US population - PubMed (original) (raw)
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History of the Rochester Epidemiology Project: half a century of medical records linkage in a US population
Walter A Rocca et al. Mayo Clin Proc. 2012 Dec.
Abstract
The Rochester Epidemiology Project (REP) has maintained a comprehensive medical records linkage system for nearly half a century for almost all persons residing in Olmsted County, Minnesota. Herein, we provide a brief history of the REP before and after 1966, the year in which the REP was officially established. The key protagonists before 1966 were Henry Plummer, Mabel Root, and Joseph Berkson, who developed a medical records linkage system at Mayo Clinic. In 1966, Leonard Kurland established collaborative agreements with other local health care providers (hospitals, physician groups, and clinics [primarily Olmsted Medical Center]) to develop a medical records linkage system that covered the entire population of Olmsted County, and he obtained funding from the National Institutes of Health to support the new system. In 1997, L. Joseph Melton III addressed emerging concerns about the confidentiality of medical record information by introducing a broad patient research authorization as per Minnesota state law. We describe how the key protagonists of the REP have responded to challenges posed by evolving medical knowledge, information technology, and public expectation and policy. In addition, we provide a general description of the system; discuss issues of data quality, reliability, and validity; describe the research team structure; provide information about funding; and compare the REP with other medical information systems. The REP can serve as a model for the development of similar research infrastructures in the United States and worldwide.
Copyright © 2012 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Figures
FIGURE 1
A, The father, W. W. Mayo (1819-1911, center), and the 2 Mayo brothers, W. J. Mayo (1861-1939, right) and C. H. Mayo (1865-1939, left). B, Leather-bound ledgers used before 1907. C, H. S. Plummer (1874-1936). D, The new medical record introduced by Dr Plummer in 1907 to assemble forms for each patient into a dossier (paper file).
FIGURE 2
A, Mabel Root (1878-1981), secretary to Dr Plummer. B, Index card listing patients seen at Mayo Clinic for hypothyroidism (organ = thyroid; disease = hypothyroidism). C, J. Berkson (1899-1982). D, A Hollerith punch card used for mechanical data processing.
FIGURE 3
A, L. T. Kurland (1921-2001), founder of the Rochester Epidemiology Project. B, L. J. Melton III (1944-). C, Current logo of the Rochester Epidemiology Project.
FIGURE 4
Scheme of the steps involved in linking medical records, indexing diagnoses and other data, and retrieving medical records for a research study.
References
- Susser M., Stein Z. Oxford University Press; New York, NY: 2009. Eras in Epidemiology: The Evolution of Ideas.
- Newcombe H.B. Oxford University Press; New York, NY: 1988. Handbook of Record Linkage: Methods for Health and Statistical Studies, Administration, and Business.
- Dunn H.L. Record linkage. Am J Public Health Nations Health. 1946;36(12):1412–1416. - PubMed
- Porta M.S., International Epidemiological Association . 5th ed. Oxford University Press; New York, NY: 2008. A Dictionary of Epidemiology.
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