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Featured researches published by David Moner.


International Journal of Medical Informatics | 2009

LinkEHR-Ed: A multi-reference model archetype editor based on formal semantics

José Alberto Maldonado; David Moner; Diego Boscá; Jesualdo Tomás Fernández-Breis; Carlos Angulo; Montserrat Robles

PURPOSE To develop a powerful archetype editing framework capable of handling multiple reference models and oriented towards the semantic description and standardization of legacy data. METHODS The main prerequisite for implementing tools providing enhanced support for archetypes is the clear specification of archetype semantics. We propose a formalization of the definition section of archetypes based on types over tree-structured data. It covers the specialization of archetypes, the relationship between reference models and archetypes and conformance of data instances to archetypes. RESULTS LinkEHR-Ed, a visual archetype editor based on the former formalization with advanced processing capabilities that supports multiple reference models, the editing and semantic validation of archetypes, the specification of mappings to data sources, and the automatic generation of data transformation scripts, is developed. CONCLUSIONS LinkEHR-Ed is a useful tool for building, processing and validating archetypes based on any reference model.


Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association | 2013

Leveraging electronic healthcare record standards and semantic web technologies for the identification of patient cohorts

Jesualdo Tomás Fernández-Breis; José Alberto Maldonado; Mar Marcos; María del Carmen Legaz-García; David Moner; Joaquín Torres-Sospedra; Angel Esteban-Gil; Begoña Martínez-Salvador; Montserrat Robles

BACKGROUND The secondary use of electronic healthcare records (EHRs) often requires the identification of patient cohorts. In this context, an important problem is the heterogeneity of clinical data sources, which can be overcome with the combined use of standardized information models, virtual health records, and semantic technologies, since each of them contributes to solving aspects related to the semantic interoperability of EHR data. OBJECTIVE To develop methods allowing for a direct use of EHR data for the identification of patient cohorts leveraging current EHR standards and semantic web technologies. MATERIALS AND METHODS We propose to take advantage of the best features of working with EHR standards and ontologies. Our proposal is based on our previous results and experience working with both technological infrastructures. Our main principle is to perform each activity at the abstraction level with the most appropriate technology available. This means that part of the processing will be performed using archetypes (ie, data level) and the rest using ontologies (ie, knowledge level). Our approach will start working with EHR data in proprietary format, which will be first normalized and elaborated using EHR standards and then transformed into a semantic representation, which will be exploited by automated reasoning. RESULTS We have applied our approach to protocols for colorectal cancer screening. The results comprise the archetypes, ontologies, and datasets developed for the standardization and semantic analysis of EHR data. Anonymized real data have been used and the patients have been successfully classified by the risk of developing colorectal cancer. CONCLUSIONS This work provides new insights in how archetypes and ontologies can be effectively combined for EHR-driven phenotyping. The methodological approach can be applied to other problems provided that suitable archetypes, ontologies, and classification rules can be designed.


Journal of Biomedical Informatics | 2012

Using the ResearchEHR platform to facilitate the practical application of the EHR standards

José Alberto Maldonado; Catalina Martínez Costa; David Moner; Marcos Menárguez-Tortosa; Diego Boscá; Jose Giménez; Jesualdo Tomás Fernández-Breis; Montserrat Robles

Possibly the most important requirement to support co-operative work among health professionals and institutions is the ability of sharing EHRs in a meaningful way, and it is widely acknowledged that standardization of data and concepts is a prerequisite to achieve semantic interoperability in any domain. Different international organizations are working on the definition of EHR architectures but the lack of tools that implement them hinders their broad adoption. In this paper we present ResearchEHR, a software platform whose objective is to facilitate the practical application of EHR standards as a way of reaching the desired semantic interoperability. This platform is not only suitable for developing new systems but also for increasing the standardization of existing ones. The work reported here describes how the platform allows for the edition, validation, and search of archetypes, converts legacy data into normalized, archetypes extracts, is able to generate applications from archetypes and finally, transforms archetypes and data extracts into other EHR standards. We also include in this paper how ResearchEHR has made possible the application of the CEN/ISO 13606 standard in a real environment and the lessons learnt with this experience.


Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association | 2015

Clinical information modeling processes for semantic interoperability of electronic health records: systematic review and inductive analysis

Alberto Moreno-Conde; David Moner; Wellington Dimas da Cruz; Marcelo Rodrigues dos Santos; José Alberto Maldonado; Montserrat Robles; Dipak Kalra

OBJECTIVE This systematic review aims to identify and compare the existing processes and methodologies that have been published in the literature for defining clinical information models (CIMs) that support the semantic interoperability of electronic health record (EHR) systems. MATERIAL AND METHODS Following the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses systematic review methodology, the authors reviewed published papers between 2000 and 2013 that covered that semantic interoperability of EHRs, found by searching the PubMed, IEEE Xplore, and ScienceDirect databases. Additionally, after selection of a final group of articles, an inductive content analysis was done to summarize the steps and methodologies followed in order to build CIMs described in those articles. RESULTS Three hundred and seventy-eight articles were screened and thirty six were selected for full review. The articles selected for full review were analyzed to extract relevant information for the analysis and characterized according to the steps the authors had followed for clinical information modeling. DISCUSSION Most of the reviewed papers lack a detailed description of the modeling methodologies used to create CIMs. A representative example is the lack of description related to the definition of terminology bindings and the publication of the generated models. However, this systematic review confirms that most clinical information modeling activities follow very similar steps for the definition of CIMs. Having a robust and shared methodology could improve their correctness, reliability, and quality. CONCLUSION Independently of implementation technologies and standards, it is possible to find common patterns in methods for developing CIMs, suggesting the viability of defining a unified good practice methodology to be used by any clinical information modeler.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2006

Archetype-based semantic integration and standardization of clinical data.

David Moner; José Alberto Maldonado; Diego Boscá; Jesualdo Tomás Fernández; Carlos Angulo; Pere Crespo; Pedro J. Vivancos; Montserrat Robles

One of the basic needs for any healthcare professional is to be able to access to clinical information of patients in an understandable and normalized way. The lifelong clinical information of any person supported by electronic means configures his/her Electronic Health Record (EHR). This information is usually distributed among several independent and heterogeneous systems that may be syntactically or semantically incompatible. The Dual Model architecture has appeared as a new proposal for maintaining a homogeneous representation of the EHR with a clear separation between information and knowledge. Information is represented by a Reference Model which describes common data structures with minimal semantics. Knowledge is specified by archetypes, which are formal representations of clinical concepts built upon a particular Reference Model. This kind of architecture is originally thought for implantation of new clinical information systems, but archetypes can be also used for integrating data of existing and not normalized systems, adding at the same time a semantic meaning to the integrated data. In this paper we explain the possible use of a Dual Model approach for semantic integration and standardization of heterogeneous clinical data sources and present LinkEHR-Ed, a tool for developing archetypes as elements for integration purposes. LinkEHR-Ed has been designed to be easily used by the two main participants of the creation process of archetypes for clinical data integration: the Health domain expert and the Information Technologies domain expert


International Journal of Medical Informatics | 2015

Archetype-based data warehouse environment to enable the reuse of electronic health record data

Luis Marco-Ruiz; David Moner; José Alberto Maldonado; Nils Kolstrup; Johan Gustav Bellika

BACKGROUND The reuse of data captured during health care delivery is essential to satisfy the demands of clinical research and clinical decision support systems. A main barrier for the reuse is the existence of legacy formats of data and the high granularity of it when stored in an electronic health record (EHR) system. Thus, we need mechanisms to standardize, aggregate, and query data concealed in the EHRs, to allow their reuse whenever they are needed. OBJECTIVE To create a data warehouse infrastructure using archetype-based technologies, standards and query languages to enable the interoperability needed for data reuse. MATERIALS AND METHODS The work presented makes use of best of breed archetype-based data transformation and storage technologies to create a workflow for the modeling, extraction, transformation and load of EHR proprietary data into standardized data repositories. We converted legacy data and performed patient-centered aggregations via archetype-based transformations. Later, specific purpose aggregations were performed at a query level for particular use cases. RESULTS Laboratory test results of a population of 230,000 patients belonging to Troms and Finnmark counties in Norway requested between January 2013 and November 2014 have been standardized. Test records normalization has been performed by defining transformation and aggregation functions between the laboratory records and an archetype. These mappings were used to automatically generate open EHR compliant data. These data were loaded into an archetype-based data warehouse. Once loaded, we defined indicators linked to the data in the warehouse to monitor test activity of Salmonella and Pertussis using the archetype query language. DISCUSSION Archetype-based standards and technologies can be used to create a data warehouse environment that enables data from EHR systems to be reused in clinical research and decision support systems. With this approach, existing EHR data becomes available in a standardized and interoperable format, thus opening a world of possibilities toward semantic or concept-based reuse, query and communication of clinical data.


artificial intelligence in medicine in europe | 2011

An archetype-based solution for the interoperability of computerised guidelines and electronic health records

Mar Marcos; José Alberto Maldonado; Begoña Martínez-Salvador; David Moner; Diego Boscá; Montserrat Robles

Clinical guidelines contain recommendations based on the best empirical evidence available at the moment. There is a wide consensus about the benefits of guidelines and about the fact that they should be deployed through clinical information systems, making them available during consultation time. However, one of the main obstacles to this integration is still the interaction with the electronic health record. In this paper we present an archetype-based approach to solve the interoperability problems of guideline systems, as well as to enable guideline sharing. We also describe the knowledge requirements for the development of archetype-enabled guideline systems, and then focus on the development of appropriate guideline archetypes and on the connection of these archetypes to the target electronic health record.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2008

A semantic web-based system for managing clinical archetypes

Jesualdo Tomás Fernández-Breis; Marcos Menárguez-Tortosa; Catalina Martínez-Costa; Eneko Fernandez-Breis; Jose Herrero-Sempere; David Moner; Jesús Sánchez; Rafael Valencia-García; Montserrat Robles

Archetypes facilitate the sharing of clinical knowledge and therefore are a basic tool for achieving interoperability between healthcare information systems. In this paper, a Semantic Web System for Managing Archetypes is presented. This system allows for the semantic annotation of archetypes, as well for performing semantic searches. The current system is capable of working with both ISO13606 and OpenEHR archetypes.


International Journal of Medical Informatics | 2007

Non-invasive lightweight integration engine for building EHR from autonomous distributed systems

Carlos Angulo; Pere Crespo; José Alberto Maldonado; David Moner; Daniel Pérez; Irene Abad; Jesús Mandingorra; Montserrat Robles

In this paper we describe Pangea-LE, a message-oriented lightweight data integration engine that allows homogeneous and concurrent access to clinical information from disperse and heterogeneous data sources. The engine extracts the information and passes it to the requesting client applications in a flexible XML format. The XML response message can be formatted on demand by appropriate Extensible Stylesheet Language (XSL) transformations in order to meet the needs of client applications. We also present a real deployment in a hospital where Pangea-LE collects and generates an XML view of all the available patient clinical information. The information is presented to healthcare professionals in an Electronic Health Record (EHR) viewer Web application with patient search and EHR browsing capabilities. Implantation in a real setting has been a success due to the non-invasive nature of Pangea-LE which respects the existing information systems.


pacific rim knowledge acquisition workshop | 2006

An ontological infrastructure for the semantic integration of clinical archetypes

Jesualdo Tomás Fernández-Breis; Marcos Menárguez-Tortosa; David Moner; Rafael Valencia-García; José Alberto Maldonado; Pedro José Vivancos-Vicente; Teddy G. Miranda-Mena; Rodrigo Martínez-Béjar

One of the basic needs for any healthcare professional is to be able to access clinical information of patients in an understandable and normalized way. The lifelong clinical information of any person supported by electronic means configures his Electronic Health Record (EHR). There are currently different standards for representing EHRs. Each standard defines its own information models, so that, in order to promote the interoperability among standard-compliant information systems, the different information models must be semantically integrated. In this work, we present an ontological approach to promote interoperability among CEN- and OpenEHR- compliant information systems by facilitating the construction of interoperable clinical archetypes.

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José Alberto Maldonado

Polytechnic University of Valencia

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Montserrat Robles

Polytechnic University of Valencia

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Diego Boscá

Polytechnic University of Valencia

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Carlos Angulo

Polytechnic University of Valencia

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Ernesto Reig

Polytechnic University of Valencia

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