Yan Chen, Yehoshua Perl, James Geller, and James J.
Cimino.
Analysis of a Study
of the Users, Uses and Future Agenda of the UMLS.
To appear on Journal of the American Medical Informatics
Association. 2006 Dec.
Abstract: Objective: The
UMLS constitutes the largest existing collection of
medical terms. However, little has been published about
the users and uses of the UMLS. This study sheds lights
on these issues.
Design: We designed a questionnaire consisting of 26
questions and distributed it to the UMLS user mailing
list. Participants were assured complete confidentiality
of their replies. To further encourage list members to
respond, we promised to provide them with early results
prior to publication. Sector analysis of the responses,
according to employment organizations is used to obtain
insights into some responses.
Result: We received 70 responses. The study confirms two
intended uses of the UMLS, access to source
terminologies (75%) and mapping among them (44%).
However, most access is just to a few sources, led by
SNOMED, MeSH and ICD. Out of 119 reported purposes of
use, terminology research (37), information retrieval
(19), and terminology translation (14) lead. Four
important observations are that the UMLS is widely used
as a terminology (77%), even though it was not designed
as one; many users (73%) want the NLM to mark concepts
with multiple parents in an indented hierarchy and to
derive a terminology from the UMLS (73%). Finally,
auditing the UMLS is a top budget priority (35%) for
users.
Conclusion: The study reports many uses of the UMLS in a
variety of subjects from terminology research to
decision support and phenotyping. The study confirms
that the UMLS is used to access its source terminologies
and to map among them. Two primary concerns of the
existing user base are auditing the UMLS and the design
of a UMLS-based derived terminology. |