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Routinely-collected general practice data are complex, but with systematic processing can be used for quality improvement and research.
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Routinely-collected general practice data are complex, but with systematic processing can be used for quality improvement and research.

S de Lusignan, N Hague, J van Vlymen and P Kumarapeli
Inform Prim Care, Vol.14(1), pp.59-66
2006

Abstract

Ambulatory Care Information Systems Cardiovascular Diseases Data Collection Great Britain Humans Medical Audit Medical Records Systems Computerized Primary Health Care Quality Assurance Health Care Quality Indicators Health Care
UK general practice is computerised, and quality targets based on computer data provide a further incentive to improve data quality. A National Programme for Information Technology is standardising the technical infrastructure and removing some of the barriers to data aggregation. Routinely collected data is an underused resource, yet little has been written about the wide range of factors that need to be taken into account if we are to infer meaning from general practice data.
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