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Contact Information
Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention
Division of Cancer
Prevention and Control
4770 Buford Hwy, NE
MS K-64
Atlanta, GA 30341-3717

Call: 1 (800) CDC-INFO
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FAX: (770) 488-4760

E-mail: cdcinfo@cdc.gov

Project Description

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  • New Name! NPCR-AERRO, previously known as NPCR-MERP, the Modeling Electronic Reporting Project, began as a proof-of-concept project and has expanded to include a variety of modeling, analysis and design, and implementation activities. The project name has been changed to reflect the scope of work more accurately.

    NPCR-AERRO is a collaborative effort among public and private sector organizations committed to automating cancer registry operations and implementing electronic reporting from critical data sources to cancer registries for the purposes of increasing timeliness, quality, and completeness of data used to quantify the national cancer burden accurately.

    NPCR-AERRO identifies cancer registry stakeholders from across the United States and invites them to participate in developing a cancer surveillance model; consensus and buy-in from this community are critical to develop and implement a model that can positively impact the way cancer registries operate. Stakeholders include representatives from the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program (SEER), the American College of Surgeons' Commission on Cancer (CoC), the North American Association of Central Cancer Registries (NAACCR), the College of American Pathologists (CAP), state cancer registries, state comprehensive cancer control programs, hospital cancer registries, national pathology laboratories, and software vendors. See below for the full list of participants.

    Scope

    NPCR-AERRO focuses on all current and potential data sources for the hospital and central cancer registry levels. NPCR-AERRO focused on hospitals as a first priority because a majority of cancer data is received from this source. Electronic reporting of hospital data can improve the timeliness, completeness, and quality of cancer surveillance data reported at the state and national levels. Other sources, such as pathology and physicians' offices, can be addressed as well.

    The NPCR-AERRO scope diagram is a simple flow diagram that identifies the multiple data sources in a ranked order, based on the quantity of useful data that are available and reported to the central cancer registry. This diagram provides a simplified high-level view of the project scope for the hospital and central cancer registry levels.

    Rationale

    The project addresses the ongoing presidential health initiative to implement an Electronic Health Record (EHR). NPCR-AERRO provides a means for the cancer surveillance community to contribute to developing and implementing tools that use the EHR. Several activities play a role in moving the President's initiative forward, including—

    • Creating the Office of National Coordinator for Health Information Technology.
    • Developing a functional model for an EHR system by Health Level 7 (HL7).
    • Improving public health communications by using and promoting health data and technology standards by CDC's Public Health Information Network (PHIN).
    • Adopting government-wide implementation of interoperability standards such as HL7, SNOMED, and LOINC by the eGov Consolidated Health Informatics project.

    Standards

    NPCR-AERRO uses widely accepted data and technical standards and protocols. The models developed in this project use industry standard messages and vocabularies so they can be implemented across the cancer surveillance community. Representative standards are listed below.

    Participants

    CDC's National Program of Cancer Registries (NPCR) led NPCR-AERRO during Phase I, with the Virginia Commonwealth University's Health System (VCUHS),* the Virginia Department of Health Central Cancer Registry (VCR),* and the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) Program.

    In Phase II, additional partners include—

    A number of organizations are participating in project activities, including—

    • Alabama Cancer Registry
    • Alaska Cancer Registry
    • Alaska Comprehensive Cancer Control Program
    • American Samoa Comprehensive Cancer Control Program
    • Arkansas Cancer Registry
    • Arkansas Chronic Disease Epidemiology Program
    • Arizona Cancer Registry
    • Arizona Cancer Control Program
    • California Cancer Registry
    • California Comprehensive Cancer Control Program
    • Colorado Cancer Registry
    • Florida Cancer Data System
    • Florida Comprehensive Cancer Control Program
    • Fond du Lac Reservation's Comprehensive Cancer Control and Prevention
    • Georgia Cancer Registry
    • Illinois Cancer Registry
    • Kansas Cancer Registry
    • Kansas Cancer Prevention and Control Program
    • Kentucky Cancer Registry
    • Louisiana Cancer Registry
    • Maine Cancer Registry
    • Maryland Cancer Registry
    • Michigan Cancer Registry
    • Minnesota Cancer Registry
    • Missouri Cancer Registry
    • Nevada Cancer Registry
    • New Hampshire Cancer Registry
    • New Hampshire Comprehensive Cancer Control Program
    • New Jersey Cancer Registry
    • New Mexico Tumor Registry
    • New York State Cancer Registry
    • New York State Comprehensive Cancer Control Program
    • North Carolina Cancer Registry
    • North Dakota Cancer Registry
    • Northern Plains Comprehensive Cancer Control Program
    • Ohio Cancer Registry
    • Oklahoma Cancer Registry
    • Oregon Cancer Registry
    • Pennsylvania Cancer Prevention and Control Program
    • Rhode Island Cancer Registry
    • South Carolina Cancer Registry
    • South Carolina Comprehensive Cancer Control Program
    • Tennessee Cancer Registry
    • Texas Cancer Registry
    • Utah Cancer Registry
    • Utah Cancer Control Program
    • Virginia Cancer Registry
    • Washington Comprehensive Cancer Control Program
    • West Virginia Comprehensive Cancer Control Program

    *Links to non-Federal organizations found at this site are provided solely as a service to our users. These links do not constitute an endorsement of these organizations or their programs by CDC or the Federal Government, and none should be inferred. CDC is not responsible for the content of the individual organization Web pages found at these links.

    Page last reviewed: June 10, 2009
    Page last updated: June 10, 2009
    Content source: Division of Cancer Prevention and Control, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
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