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This Implementation Guide has drawn upon the results of multiple previous projects on patient summaries (including but not limited to epSOS, ONC, Trillium Bridge, eHealth Exchange), rules and recommendations for vocabularies and value sets (in multilingual settings), and templates for the implementation of international patient summary documents. In particular, the white paper on Comparative Analysis Between HL7 C-CDA R1.1 CCD and epSoS PS v1.4 informed the development of this specification. | This Implementation Guide has drawn upon the results of multiple previous projects on patient summaries (including but not limited to epSOS, ONC, Trillium Bridge, eHealth Exchange), rules and recommendations for vocabularies and value sets (in multilingual settings), and templates for the implementation of international patient summary documents. In particular, the white paper on Comparative Analysis Between HL7 C-CDA R1.1 CCD and epSoS PS v1.4 informed the development of this specification. | ||
− | In 2010 a MoU was signed between EU and US to strengthen global cooperation in eHealth/Health. As a result, the ONC S&I | + | In 2010 a MoU was signed between the European Union (EU) and the United States (US) to strengthen global cooperation in eHealth/Health. As a result, the ONC S&I Interoperability of EHR work group was launched in the US in 2013 (http://wiki.siframework.org/EU-US+eHealth+Cooperation+Initiative) and the Trillium Bridge Project (www.trilliumbridge.eu) was initiated in the EU. The aim was to compare the CDA templates then specified in the EU (epSOS PS V1.4) and in the US (MU – C-CDA CCD v1.1) for patient summaries and to build a transatlantic exchange proof of concept. These initiatives identified the need for common templates and vocabularies for the patient summary. The following recommendation was endorsed by the Joint Initiative Council and by the HL7 International Council: “to advance an International Patient Summary (IPS) standard and enable people to access and share their health information for emergency or unplanned care anywhere and as needed. At minimum the IPS should include immunizations, allergies, medications, clinical problems, past operations and implants.” |
− | Meanwhile | + | '''Meanwhile''' |
*A new version of the EU/US MOU Transatlantic eHealth/health IT Cooperation Roadmap entered consultation in November 2015 , ; | *A new version of the EU/US MOU Transatlantic eHealth/health IT Cooperation Roadmap entered consultation in November 2015 , ; | ||
*(US) a Shared Nationwide interoperability roadmap was published in November 2015 ; | *(US) a Shared Nationwide interoperability roadmap was published in November 2015 ; |
Revision as of 08:33, 11 May 2017
This document contains: Implementation Guide International Patient Summary (0.10). The text materials belong to category cdaips.
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Contents
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Principles and background
- 3 Conformance clause
- 4 Functional requirements and high-level use cases
- 5 Appendix
- 5.1 Acronyms and abbreviations
- 5.2 Glossary
- 5.3 Licenses (for the artifacts used, for the code systems, etc.)
- 5.4 Integrated examples, links to instances
- 5.5 Validation artifacts (xsd, schematrons)
- 5.6 Links to platforms, binaries, software libraries
- 5.7 Operational information (helpdesk, actual server endpoints for testing/production/validation)
- 5.8 FAQ’s
- 5.9 References / Literature
- 5.10 How to reuse this template
- 6 List of all artifacts used in this guide
- 7 Examples (in progress)
Introduction
The international patient summary is a minimal and non-exhaustive patient summary, specialty-agnostic, condition-independent, but readily usable by clinicians for the cross-border unscheduled care of a patient.
Purpose
See PSS
The goal of this Implementation Guide is to identify the required clinical data, vocabulary and value sets for an international patient summary. The primary use case is to provide support for cross-border emergency and unplanned care.
The international patient summary is specified as a templated document using HL7 CDA R2. The specification has taken account of how FHIR STU3 represents equivalent concepts and in some cases has followed a FHIR style of representation rather than a conventional CDA style. These variations from CDA R2 are explained in the relevant detail sections below.
This specification aims to support:
- Cross-jurisdictional patient summaries (through adaptation/extension for multi-language and realm scenarios, including translation).
- Emergency and unplanned care in any country, regardless of language.
- Value sets based on international vocabularies that are usable and understandable in any country.
- Data and metadata for document-level provenance.
The international patient summary defines SNOMED CT as the primary terminology (the meaning of "primary terminology" is discussed further in section 2.9.2) for the majority of value sets, but uses LOINC for laboratory tests, UCUM for units of measure and EDQM for dose forms and routes.
Background
This Implementation Guide has drawn upon the results of multiple previous projects on patient summaries (including but not limited to epSOS, ONC, Trillium Bridge, eHealth Exchange), rules and recommendations for vocabularies and value sets (in multilingual settings), and templates for the implementation of international patient summary documents. In particular, the white paper on Comparative Analysis Between HL7 C-CDA R1.1 CCD and epSoS PS v1.4 informed the development of this specification.
In 2010 a MoU was signed between the European Union (EU) and the United States (US) to strengthen global cooperation in eHealth/Health. As a result, the ONC S&I Interoperability of EHR work group was launched in the US in 2013 (http://wiki.siframework.org/EU-US+eHealth+Cooperation+Initiative) and the Trillium Bridge Project (www.trilliumbridge.eu) was initiated in the EU. The aim was to compare the CDA templates then specified in the EU (epSOS PS V1.4) and in the US (MU – C-CDA CCD v1.1) for patient summaries and to build a transatlantic exchange proof of concept. These initiatives identified the need for common templates and vocabularies for the patient summary. The following recommendation was endorsed by the Joint Initiative Council and by the HL7 International Council: “to advance an International Patient Summary (IPS) standard and enable people to access and share their health information for emergency or unplanned care anywhere and as needed. At minimum the IPS should include immunizations, allergies, medications, clinical problems, past operations and implants.”
Meanwhile
- A new version of the EU/US MOU Transatlantic eHealth/health IT Cooperation Roadmap entered consultation in November 2015 , ;
- (US) a Shared Nationwide interoperability roadmap was published in November 2015 ;
- The Joint Initiative Council (JIC) on SDO Global Health Informatics Standardization, initiated the standard sets project with patient summary as its pilot ;
- A maintenance process for the European Patient Summary Guidelines is in progress (expected release on Nov 2016);
- The European eHealth Digital Service Infrastructure (project for the operational deployment of the EU cross-borders services) has been launched (2016-2018)
- ART-DECOR® and the HL7 DSTU (now STU) template exchange format are being more and more used by European countries, including for the European Patient Summary templates (aka epSOS PS template). ART DECOR is also connected to the IHE
Scope
scope text from PSS
Ballot Status of the Document
This Implementation Guide is a STU with the intention to go normative.
Audience
Public
- Citizens who want to carry or access their healthcare data for emergency care purposes.
Regulatory
- Policy makers such as healthcare payers or government agencies.
- Healthcare information governance authorities and regulatory bodies.
Clinical
- Healthcare providers that offer unscheduled and emergency care.
- Healthcare providers that populate regional and national patient summaries.
Technical
- Vendors of EHRs unplanned care system, personal health records and mobile health data applications.
- System integrators.
- Organizations that manage regional and national patient summaries.
Relationships with other projects and guides
- Connection with CEN IPS - quote/cite HL7/CEN agreement
- epSOS/EXPAND/eHDSI
- C-CDA
- IHE-PCC
The Implementation Guide has received input from the EHR WG regarding the definition of provenance, defined in the provenance section .
How to read this document
Kai to write a paragraph
Principles and background
IPS Principles
(here or in the introduction?)
What is a CDA
Templated CDA
Open and Closed Templates
Template versioning
Identifiers
- (OID,...)
Terminologies
- Focus on Value Sets
How to extend Value Sets
Datatypes used in this guide
Design conventions and principles
How to use terminology (preferred binding)
Notion of "Primary Code"
Usage of translations
Principle on negations, data known absent and data unknown
- See Paris slides
- Usage of negations
- The choice for negation it is not that of using negation indicator @negationInd but rely on the terminologies to do this
- To do: add a description in the introduction
- @negationInd in CDA has been superseded in V3 later by two other negation indicators: actNegationInd valueNegationInd
- Alignment with FHIR
The representation of “condition/activity unknown” and of “condition/activity known absent”is normalized for the IPS by leveraging the expressiveness of SNOMED CT as opposed to relying on specific mechanisms of the underlying syntactical standard (such as nullFlavor and negationInd for CDA). The main rationale for this choice is to provide one single method to express either the presence or absence of a particular condition (e.g., an allergy) or activity (e.g., an immunization), or the lack of knowledge regarding this kind of condition or activity, resulting in a more robust and easily implementable specification. The other rationale is to have a representation of the clinical content of the patient summary which is less dependent on a particular format or syntax, enabling a more practical path to transforming and exchanging data from one standard format (e.g., CDA R2) to another (e.g., FHIR).
Provenance
Document-level not section level
Cite types: human-curated, assembled, hybrid; responsibility on source system to identify.
Possible future work: IPS functional profile by EHR WG
General implementation guidance
How to populates IDs, where I can get IDs
Relevant times for a patient summary
Description of the different status definitions
Authorship
Go here or somewhere else?
Standards used
SNOMED-CT, ...
Legend
Description of formalisms used, symbols, icons, how to read ART-DECOR tables
Conformance clause
Different conformance levels (to be explored)
Functional requirements and high-level use cases
- Add a reference to the CEN prEN. (to be analyzed)
- PSS
- Add a reference to the data set included in the html package
- Include in the functional area that no assumption on transport has been made…
- PS comes from one source, and covers different cases.
- Specify, how the provenance could be managed without going into details) to be included in next versions.
- To be further discussed, in any case add a paragraph in which explain the problem and how it might be faced.