Preserving medical correctness, readability and consistency in de-identified health records

Kostas Pantazos, Søren Lauesen, Søren Lippert

Publikation: Artikel i tidsskrift og konference artikel i tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningpeer review

Abstract

A health record database contains structured data fields that identify the patient, such as patient ID, patient
name, e-mail and phone number. These data are fairly easy to de-identify, that is, replace with other
identifiers. However, these data also occur in fields with doctors’ free-text notes written in an abbreviated
style that cannot be analyzed grammatically. If we replace a word that looks like a name, but isn’t, we degrade
readability and medical correctness. If we fail to replace it when we should, we degrade confidentiality. We de-identified an existing Danish electronic health record database, ending up with 323,122 patient health records. We had to invent many methods for de-identifying potential identifiers in the free-text notes. The de-identified health records should be used with caution for statistical purposes because we removed health records that were so special that they couldn’t be de-identified. Furthermore, we distorted geography by replacing zip codes with random zip codes.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftHealth Informatics Journal
Sider (fra-til)1-13
Antal sider13
ISSN1460-4582
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 1 jan. 2016

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