Difference between revisions of "Main Page"

From HL7 IPS
Jump to: navigation, search
(The IPS Implementation Guide)
(The IPS Implementation Guide)
Line 35: Line 35:
 
==The IPS Implementation Guide==
 
==The IPS Implementation Guide==
 
{|
 
{|
|+ Clinical Document Architecture || Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources
+
|+ Clinical Document Architecture | Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources
 
|-
 
|-
 
| xx || yy
 
| xx || yy

Revision as of 08:32, 29 July 2019

What is it?

The International Patient Summary is a minimal and non-exhaustive Patient Summary, specialty-agnostic, condition-independent, but readily usable by all clinicians for the unscheduled (cross-border) care of a patient.

International Patient Summary

Hl7intnew.png

This is the wiki hosting the Implementation Guide for the International Patient Summary, an HL7 project. An International Patient Summary contains the following data:

  • General information about the patient (e.g. name, birth date, gender)
  • A medical summary consisting of the most important clinical patient data (e.g. allergies, current medical problems, medical implants, or major surgical procedures during the last six months).
  • A list of the current medication including all prescribed medicines that the patient is currently taking.

Information about the Patient Summary itself e.g. when and by whom the Patient Summary was generated or updated. This data is also used for protocol and security purposes.

About Patient Summaries

A Patient Summary is a standardized set of basic medical data that includes the most important clinical facts required to ensure safe and secure healthcare.

This summarized version of the patient’s medical data gives health professionals the essential information they need to provide care in the case of an unexpected or unscheduled medical situation (e.g. emergency or accident).

Though this data is mainly intended to aid health professionals in providing unscheduled care, it can also be used to provide planned medical care (e.g. in the case of citizen movements or cross-organizational care paths).