Bonigut, Matthias; Zhelyazkova, Ana; Weber, Mathias; Geiser-Metz, Stefanie; Geis, Markus; Heindl, Bernhard; Prückner, Stephan (2025): COVID-19 vaccination and test management for healthcare workers—development, implementation and feasibility of a custom human resources information platform at a university hospital. BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making, 25: 142. ISSN 1472-6947
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Veröffentlichte Publikation
s12911-025-02974-0.pdf

Abstract
Background
The continuously evolving legislative and reporting requirements during the COVID-19 pandemic posed the demand for establishing an efficient real-time human resources management system at the LMU University Hospital, one of the largest university hospitals in Germany. Developing a system allowing for agile real-time analysis as well as for reporting employees’ COVID-19 vaccination and testing status while ensuring the security of personnel data presented several technical and managerial challenges.
Methods
We designed and implemented a custom COVID-19 human resources information platform in order to fulfill the LMU University Hospital’s legal requirement to report employees’ vaccination and testing status. We designed the platform as an all-in-one solution for all relevant COVID-19 data, merged from five individual sources. The development process was guided by the principles of findability, accessibility, interoperability and reusability (FAIR) with particular focus on interoperability. Here, we present the platform’s design, cumulative user data and discuss the feasibility of the approach including its intended and unintended outcomes.
Results
The COVID-19 human resources management platform was the first solution of its kind at the LMU University Hospital, emerging from the specific need for an efficient exterior and interior mandate fulfillment. It served both for operational management purposes as well as for strategic pandemic and hospital management . The immediate dependency on data privacy and regulatory adaptations due to the evolving pandemic situation posed the necessity for regular adaptations to the platform’s structure.
Conclusions
The presented case reveals how data utilization requires the concurrent and proactive consideration of data security and interoperability against the background of a scalable architecture. Simultaneously, the development of such platforms needs to be open to new cases, functions and sources, thus requiring a dynamic and agile environment.
Dokumententyp: | Artikel (Klinikum der LMU) |
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Organisationseinheit (Fakultäten): | 07 Medizin > Klinikum der LMU München > Institut für Notfallmedizin und Medizinmanagement (INM) |
DFG-Fachsystematik der Wissenschaftsbereiche: | Lebenswissenschaften |
Veröffentlichungsdatum: | 15. Okt 2025 10:50 |
Letzte Änderung: | 15. Okt 2025 10:50 |
URI: | https://oa-fund.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/2042 |
DFG: | Gefördert durch die Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - 491502892 |