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SPARCRequest and OnCore Interface Information
A fully integrated interface between SPARCRequest and OnCore has been developed under the promotion of the Medical University of South Carolina. Roll-out with OnCore enterprise went live in September 2020.
The purpose of SPARCRequest having a minimum footprint Interface with OnCore (as shown in Figure 1):
Easier creation of research protocol and billing calendar outside Epic
Uniform research pricing and improved billing compliance
Reduce manual and duplicative data entry
Improve data consistency across systems
Comprehensive reporting
Enhance communication across providers
User/research provider management
Figure 1 Functionality and Overlap between SPARCRequest and Epic
Information pushed from SPARCRequest to OnCore comes from the Study Summary section (see Figure 2) and the study calendar section (see Figure 3) of SPARCRequest, which helps build the following pieces in OnCore :
Research study administrative (RSH) record
Study timeline
Study staff
Funding source identification
Participant Privacy Protections
Figure 2
Figure 3
Specific terms in SPARCRequest that match with the ones in Epic are listed below.
SPARCRequest Terms | Epic Terms |
---|---|
Protocol Information | General Information |
Protocol Title | Study Name (I RSH .2) |
PRO # (IRB #) | IRB # (I RSH 105) |
NCT# | NCT # (I RSH 181) |
Protocol ID | Study Code(I RSH 100) |
Reporting Groupers | |
Funding Source | Report Grouper - Category List 1 (I RSH 3001) |
Study Type generated from SPARC Epic boxIDE, HUD, and HDE# (under Investigational Products)Research Master ID (RMID) | Report Grouper - Category List 3 (I RSH 3011)Report Grouper - Free-Text 2 (I RSH 3002)Report Grouper -Free-Text 3 (I RSH 3003) |
Role | Study Users (role_code) |
Primary PI | Principal Investigator (I RSH 130) (SER needed) |
PI/PD; Co-Investigator; Staff Scientist; Postdoctoral scholar, Fellow, or other Postdoctoral Position; Technician | Other providers (I RSH 140) (SER needed) |
Research Nurse | Nurses (I RSH 150) (SER needed) |
Graduate Research Assistant; Undergraduate Research Assistant; Research Assistant/Coordinator; Billing/Business Manager | Study Coordinators (I RSH 110) (no SER needed; EMP only) |
Faculty Collaborator; Consultant; Mentor; General Access User; Other | Research Contacts (I RSH 120) (no SER needed; EMP only) |
Visit Calendar (Billing Information) | Study Calendar |
ARM | Protocol (I PRL .2) |
Visit | Visit (CYCLE) (I PRL 200) |
Day | Day (CTTEVENT) (I PRL 400) |
Window | Research tolerance (I PRL 470 [minus], I PRL 480 [plus]) |
Service | Component (I PRL 41005) |
Research/Third Party Payer (R/T) | Modifier (I PRL 41007) |
Epic Questions | STUDYTYPE |
Answers to Epic Questions 1 to 5, Logic-driven | Study Type (I RSH115) |
*Principal investigator, Other providers, and Nurses need to have the corresponding “provider’s record” if he/she has been selected to have EMR access.
Protocols (records) that are “Submitted” in SPARCRequest by users are sent to an Epic Queue in SPARCRequest;
If the Epic queue configuration is turned on, the protocols that are interfaced to Epic are sent automatically in a batch mode on daily basis; If the Epic queue configuration is turned off, the protocols are queued and have to be pushed manually by system identified users.
Authorized users can view, send or delete the protocols in the SPARC/Epic queue with the functions described below.
OnCore Log Function (from SPARCDashboard)
In SPARCDashboard, authorized service providers are able to see the “Epic Queue” button (Figure 4), which will allow them to check what studies are in the process of being pushed to Epic.
Figure 4
Epic Queue Page
Once the user clicks the "Epic Queue" button, there are 3 tabs on the page displayed: Current, Past, and Protocol Update tabs.
Figure 5 shows the "Current" tab, where the current queued protocols are listed and waiting to be pushed to Epic. These queued protocols can be pushed or deleted from the queue, and there are URLs linking back to the individual protocols.
Figure 5
When adding or editing authorized users on studies chosen to be pushed to Epic, there is an "Epic EMR Access" choice that authorizes whether a user should have access to Epic (Figure 6). This field is interfaced with Epic real-time, and only allows the choice of "Yes" when the user has a valid EMP record in Epic.
Figure 6
When user rights have been updated for a protocol that have already been pushed to Epic successfully before, that protocol information message will automatically be queued and sent to Epic on the same day at 5 pm. These type of protocols are listed on the "Protocol Update" tab, with detailed information and URL linking back.
.
Figure 7
Previously pushed protocols are listed in the "Past" tab, showing the detailed information about the previous Epic pushes that happened to the protocols, such as PI, last queued date, status, source of the push, and by whom.
There are three types of Epic pushes: Overlord Push, Protocol Update and Admin Push. The Overlord Push is push from the Epic Queue page, Admin Push are the ones done from SPARCDashboard Admin Edit section, and Protocol Update are the automatic protocol information update pushes triggered by user updates (Figure 8).
Figure 8
On the "Past" tab, users can also attach notes to a Epic push with corresponding information if desired (Figure 9).
Figure 9
Technical Specs
Format: Health Level Seven (HL7) messaging, based on an XML encoding
Protocol: Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP)
The API can be used for other Electronic Health Record (EHR) Systems as a template
An example SOAP message can be found here: https://github.com/sparc-request/sparc-request/wiki/Epic-XML-example
For more details, please check the links below to the GitHub codes: https://github.com/sparc-request/sparc-request/blob/master/lib/epic_interface.rb