Health IT
Capabilities
Integrated Data System Design & Implementation
Eagle scientists aggregate clients’ data, siloed in separate legacy input systems, using the right combination of ETL processes, platforms, cloud-based data storage and maintenance, security protocols, and mechanisms for sharing data with appropriate end-user roles and restrictions.
Interoperability
We facilitate the secure, protected, FHIR -based exchange of personal, health and social information from input to central data systems. Furthermore, to safeguard individuals’ privacy , Eagle employs Privacy-Preserving Record Linkage (PPRL). We encode and encrypt data at input sites prior to transfer to central repositories, ensuring that patients’ privacy is always protected.
Data Linkage Based on Advanced Cryptographic Techniques
Our central servers receive demographic, health and social data that is encoded and encrypted. We employ advanced cryptographic methods to accurately link records from various input sources, reducing the occurrence of both false positive and false negative matches. Afterward, our ETL processes aggregate and transform the data, so they are ready for analysis.
Surveillance
We specialize in creating and implementing systems that collect real-time data on patients, facilities, and providers in a secure and cost-effective manner. This allows our client agencies to monitor and improve the quality of the nation’s healthcare and social services. Our systems also utilize artificial intelligence to identify potential hazards and anomalies, enabling prompt responses to emerging issues.
Early Childhood Integrated Data Systems (ECIDS)
Eagle works with state Departments of Education to design integrated child services data systems, to aggregate data across multiple siloed legacy systems. This crucial integration will enable states to generate real-time insights about the children and families served, any service gaps, and program successes. More information on Eagle’s ECIDS capabilities can be found here.
Experience
- Eagle provided the end-to-end design and management of centralized health and social services reporting systems. This facilitated SAMHSA’s and ACF’s continuous surveillance of the services, staffing, operations, reach, and effectiveness of their health and social programs.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA)
- Eagle designed and operated cloud-based public health data collection systems maintaining repositories of crucial healthcare data. These repositories, which were maintained with no unscheduled downtime, enabled government agencies, researchers, and industry partners to access and analyze high-quality data on U.S. the behavioral health system.
- Eagle successfully administered federal healthcare surveys, achieving high response rates of around 90%. These surveys provided SAMHSA with annual insights into the practices of a majority of the country’s behavioral health providers.
- Eagle developed and consistently updated national patient- and facility-level data sets, delivering them accurately and on schedule every year that we were the primary contractor. These data sets also supported SAMHSA’s surveillance efforts and served as valuable analytical resources for various government agencies, researchers, and industry professionals.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), HHS Administration for Children and Families (ACF), and HHS Office of Inspector General (OIG)
- Eagle designed transformative Health IT solutions that leverage interoperability and data sharing to support interconnected processes, workflows, triggers, and notifications.
HHS
- Eagle played a key role in guiding a federal initiative to combine siloed healthcare data into a single integrated enterprise system. This project brought together multiple Health and Human Services agencies and fulfilled their long-standing goal of having more comprehensive and integrated data on patients and healthcare systems at the national and global level.
- Recent examples of our insight are “The Missing Link – Solving patient privacy protection and data linkage challenges for the National Public Health Data System” and “Cloud-based Machine Learning to Address the Nation’s Most Urgent Behavioral Health Problems”.