HITSP Reference Acronym List
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SNOMED CT Implementation: Implications of Choosing Clinical Findings Or Observable Entities
SNOMED CT implementation: Implications of choosing Clinical findings or Observable entities a,1 a Anne Randorff Rasmussen , Kirstine Rosenbeck aDepartment of Health Science and Technology, Medical Informatics, Aalborg University, Denmark Abstract. Internationally, it is a priority to develop and implement semantically interoperable health information systems.[1] One required technology is the use of standardised clinical terminologies. The terminology, SNOMED CT, has shown superior coverage compared to other terminologies in multiple clinical fields. The aim of this paper is to analyse SNOMED CT implementation in an Electronic Health Record (EHR). More specifically, differences and consequences of applying clinical findings (CFs) as an alternative to observable entities (OEs) is analysed. Results show that CFs represents the content of the templates with better coverage, with more parent concepts and with a higher degree of fully defined terms than the OEs. We discuss the possibility to further evaluate the observable entity hierarchy to overcome a potential overlapping use of the two hierarchies. Keywords. Clinical terminology, Implementation, SNOMED CT, Observable entity, Clinical finding, Electronic Health Record 1. Introduction Multiple definitions of identical concepts are a challenge in data communication in health care. Use of standardised clinical terminologies has the potential to ensure unambiguous data definition. This is a prerequisite in achieving semantic interoperability between health information systems. There exists numerous clinical terminologies, but SNOMED CT has shown to be superior regarding coverage in multiple clinical fields.[2,3] Therefore, SNOMED CT is chosen as the point of departure in this study. SNOMED CT is maintained and refined by the International Health Terminology Standardisation Organisation (IHTSDO). -
OASIS Response to NSTC Request for Feedback on Standard Practices
OASIS RESPONSE TO NSTC REQUEST FOR FEEDBACK ON STANDARDS PRACTICES OASIS (Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards) is pleased to respond to the request from the National Science and Technology Council's Sub-Committee on Standards published at 75 FR 76397 (2010), and extended by 76 FR 3877 (2011), for feedback and observations regarding the effectiveness of Federal agencies' participation in the development and implementation of standards and conformity assessment activities and programs. We have advised our own members about the Federal Register inquiry, in case they wish to respond. Of course, their opinions are their own, and this response does not represent the views of any members, but only the observations of OASIS professional staff. I. RESPONDENT'S BACKGROUND OASIS is one of the largest and oldest global open data standards consortia, founded in 1993 as SGML Open. OASIS has over 5000 active participants representing about 600 member organizations and individual members in over 80 countries. We host widely-used standards in multiple fields including • cybersecurity & access control (such as WS-Security, SAML, XACML, KMIP, DSS & XSPA) [/1], • office documents and smart semantic documents (such as OpenDocument, DITA, DocBook & CMIS) [/2], and • electronic commerce (including SOA and web services, such as BPEL, ebXML, WS-ReliableMessaging & the WS-Transaction standards) [/3] among other areas. Various specific vertical industries also fulfill their open standards requirements by initiating OASIS projects, resulting in mission-specific standards such as • UBL and Business Document Exchange (for e-procurement) [/4], • CAP and EDML (for emergency first-responder notifications) [/5], and • LegalXML (for electronic court filing data)[/6]. -
Suffolk PPS Flat File Interface Specifications
Suffolk PPS Flat File Interface Specifications DSRIP Partner Message Processing August 13, 2015, V0400 © Cerner Corporation. All rights reserved. This document contains Cerner confidential and/or proprietary information belonging to Cerner Corporation and/or its related affiliates which may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without the express written consent of Cerner. PREPARED BY: CERNER CORPORATION 51 VALLEY STREAM PARKWAY MALVERN, PENNSYLVANIA 19355 (610) 219-6300 Authors: Greg Quattlebaum, Manager, Enterprise Application Integration and Interoperability Amy Schlung, Senior Interface Architect, Data Integration Services File Name: Suffolk_Flat_Interface_Specs_081315_V0400.doc Copyright © Cerner Corporation. All rights reserved. OPENLinkTM is a trademark of Cerner Corporation. All other products and services that are referred to in this document are or may be trademarks of their respective owners. Suffolk Care Collaborative Flat File Interface Specifications Cerner Corporation 08/13/15, V0400 Page 2 of 72 Revision History and Acronyms and Meanings Revision History Version Date Author(s) Reason for Change V0100 22-Jul-2015 Greg Quattlebaum, Amy Schlung Initial Release V0200 03-Aug-2015 Greg Quattlebaum Client Changes V0300 11-Aug-2015 Greg Quattlebaum Client Changes – Add Standard Code Systems List and HL7 Code Systems and Value Sets V0400 13-Aug-2015 Greg Quattlebaum Client Changes – Move Code System Lists to end of document Acronyms Below is a list of acronyms and meanings used within this document. Acronym -
Best Practices on Public Warning Systems for Climate-Induced
Best practices on Public Warning Systems for Climate-Induced Natural Hazards Abstract: This study presents an overview of the Public Warning System, focusing on approaches, technical standards and communication systems related to the generation and the public sharing of early warnings. The analysis focuses on the definition of a set of best practices and guidelines to implement an effective public warning system that can be deployed at multiple geographic scales, from local communities up to the national and also transboundary level. Finally, a set of recommendations are provided to support decision makers in upgrading the national Public Warning System and to help policy makers in outlining future directives. Authors: Claudio Rossi Giacomo Falcone Antonella Frisiello Fabrizio Dominici Version: 30 September 2018 Table of Contents List of Figures .................................................................................................................................. 2 List of Tables ................................................................................................................................... 4 Acronyms ........................................................................................................................................ 4 Core Definitions .............................................................................................................................. 7 1. Introduction ......................................................................................................................... -
Innovations in Resource Management and Mutual Aid Technology
Innovations in Resource Management and Mutual Aid Technology July 22, 2021 National Alliance for Public Safety GIS (NAPSG) Foundation napsgfoundation.org | @napsgfoundation napsgfoundation.org | @napsgfoundation 1 Webinar Prep • Due to the large attendance, all participants are muted for the duration of the session to prevent background noise. • Please use the Q&A functionality within Zoom for questions that are relevant to the whole group. • We will address these Q&A at the end of the webinar! napsgfoundation.org | @napsgfoundation Today’s Objectives • Learn about FEMA’s National Resource Hub and how to gain access and start using the suite of resource management tools. • Gain insight into how the National Resource Hub can connect and share data with your other incident management systems, situational awareness apps, and other 3rd party systems today and in the future. • Learn what is in development to improve existing and innovate with new resource management and mutual aid technology tools and systems. • Find out what’s new in version 3.0 of the Implementation Guide on Information Sharing Standards and how you can use the guide in informing your agency’s technology selection and acquisition process to ensure interoperability and seamless information sharing. • Gain basic technical knowledge on the latest with the Emergency Data Exchange Language (EDXL) and how it supports building a National – and Global – network of interoperable incident management systems. napsgfoundation.org | @napsgfoundation 3 Agenda 2:00pm Introductions and Overview 2:10pm National Resource Hub - What It’s About - What It Can Do For You and Your Agency 2:25pm What’s Coming in the Job Aid and Technical Guidance for Incident Management Technology 2:35pm Know the Basics on EDXL and Why it Matters 2:55pm Actions & Next Steps 3:00pm Adjourned napsgfoundation.org | @napsgfoundation 4 Hosts and Panelists • Charlotte Abel, Strategic Manager, NAPSG Foundation • Harmon Rowland, Section Chief, FEMA National Integration Center • Rebecca Harned, Vice President, 4 Arrows Consulting, Inc. -
Direct Comparison of MEDCIN and SNOMED CT for Representation Of
Direct Comparison of MEDCIN ® and SNOMED CT ® for Representation of a General Medical Evaluation Template Steven H. Brown MS MD 1,2 , S. Trent Rosenbloom MD MPH 2 , Brent A. Bauer MD 3, Dietli nd Wahner -Roedler MD 3, David A. Froehling, MD, Kent R, Bailey PhD, M ichael J Lincoln MD, Diane Montella MD 1, Elliot M. Fielstein PhD 1,2 Peter L. Elkin MD 3 1. Department of Veterans Affairs 2. Vanderbilt University, Nashville TN 3. Mayo Clinic, Rochester MN Background : Two candidate terminologies to efforts. Usable and functionally complete support entry of ge neral medical data are standard terminologies need to be available to SNOMED CT and MEDCIN . W e compare the systems designers and architects. Two candidate ability of SNOMED CT and MEDCIN to terminologies to support entry of general medical represent concepts and interface terms from a data are SNOMED CT and MED CIN . VA gener al medical examination template. Methods : We parsed the VA general medical SNOMED CT is a reference terminology that evaluation template and mapped the resulting has been recommended for various components expressions into SNOMED CT and MEDCIN . of patient medical record information by the Internists conducted d ouble independent reviews Consolidated Health Informatics Council and the on 864 expressions . Exact concept level matches National Committee on Vital and Health were used to evaluate reference coverage. Exact Statistics. (12) SNOMED CT, licensed for US - term level matches were required for interface wide use by the National Library of Medicine in terms. 2003, was evaluated in 15 M edline indexed Resul ts : Sensitivity of SNOMED CT as a studie s in 2006 . -
Physician's Office Assistant with Electronic Health Records
C.15.9 (Created 07-17-2017) AUBURN OFFICE OF P ROFESSIONAL AND CONTINUING ED UCATION Office of Professional & Continuing Education 301 OD Smith Hall | Auburn, AL 36849 http://www.auburn.edu/mycaa Contact: Shavon Williams | 334-844-3108; [email protected] Auburn University is an equal opportunity educational institution/employer. Education & Training Plan Physicians’ Office Assistant with Electronic Health Records Management Certificate Program with Clinical Externship Student Full Name: Start Date: End Date: Program includes National Certification & a Clinical Externship Opportunity Mentor Supported Physicians’ Office Assistant with Electronic Health Records Management (EHRM) Certificate Program with Clinical Externship Course Code: AU-PO 10 Program Duration: 6 Months Contact Hours: 780 Student Tuition: $3,950 This Physicians’ Office Assistant with Electronic Health Records Management (EHRM) training program combines two in-demand healthcare certifications with important front office Microsoft end user computer skills. The Physician’s Office Assistant Profession with EHRM Medical administrative assistants primarily work in doctor’s offices, clinics, outpatient settings, hospitals, and other healthcare settings. Medical administrative assistants, medical secretaries, and medical records clerks are all positions in great demand. The growth and the complexity of the U.S. healthcare system have resulted in a substantial increase in the need for qualified medical administrative assistants. Employment of a medical assistant is expected to grow an impressive 34% by 2018. The Electronic Health Record Management (EHRM) Profession Access to health information is changing the ways doctors care for patients. With the nation’s healthcare system moving to the electronic medical record, numerous employment opportunities exist for medical assistants, health information systems staff, patient registration professionals and other related positions. -
Emergency Management Standards
Emergency Management Standards HL7 WGM International Council May 2019 Elysa Jones, Chair OASIS Emergency Management Technical Committee Emergency Interoperability Member Section [email protected] Agenda ▪ What is OASIS ▪ Joint work with HL7 - Tracking emergency patients - Hospital availability 2 Internationally recognized ▪ EU classifies OASIS as “one of the top three ICT consortia”. ▪ EU Regulation 1025/2012 allows OASIS specs to be referenced in public procurement ▪ OASIS is permanent member of EC’s European Multi-Stakeholder Platform on ICT Standardization ▪ OASIS TC Process is ANSI-accredited. 3 Established presence, Current agenda ▪ Nonprofit consortium ▪ Founded 1993 ▪ Global 5,000+ participants 600+ orgs & individuals in 100+ countries ▪ Home of 70+ Technical Committees ▪ Broad portfolio of standards: security, privacy, Cloud, M2M, IoT, content technologies, energy, eGov, legal, emergency management, finance, Big Data, healthcare, + other areas identified by members 4 OASIS → de jure OASIS Standard Also Approved As: Advanced Message Queuing Protocol (AMQP) ISO/IEC 19464 ebXML Collaborative Partner Profile Agreement ISO 15000-1 ebXML Messaging Service Specification ISO 15000-2 ebXML Registry Information Model ISO 15000-3 ebXML Registry Services Specification ISO 15000-4 Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) ITU-T Rec. X.1141 Extensible Access Control Markup Language (XACML) ITU-T Rec. X.1142 OpenDocument Format (ODF) ISO/IEC 26300 Common Alerting Protocol (CAP) ITU-T Rec. X.1303 Computer Graphics Metafile (WebCGM) W3C WebCGM -
Patient Safety: Achieving a New Standard for Care
THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES PRESS This PDF is available at http://nap.edu/10863 SHARE Patient Safety: Achieving a New Standard for Care DETAILS 550 pages | 6 x 9 | HARDBACK ISBN 978-0-309-09077-3 | DOI 10.17226/10863 AUTHORS BUY THIS BOOK Philip Aspden, Janet M. Corrigan, Julie Wolcott, Shari M. Erickson, Editors, Committee on Data Standards for Patient Safety FIND RELATED TITLES Visit the National Academies Press at NAP.edu and login or register to get: – Access to free PDF downloads of thousands of scientific reports – 10% off the price of print titles – Email or social media notifications of new titles related to your interests – Special offers and discounts Distribution, posting, or copying of this PDF is strictly prohibited without written permission of the National Academies Press. (Request Permission) Unless otherwise indicated, all materials in this PDF are copyrighted by the National Academy of Sciences. Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. Patient Safety: Achieving a New Standard for Care PATIENT SAFETY ACHIEVING A NEW STANDARD FOR CARE Committee on Data Standards for Patient Safety Board on Health Care Services Philip Aspden, Janet M. Corrigan, Julie Wolcott, and Shari M. Erickson, Editors Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. Patient Safety: Achieving a New Standard for Care THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES PRESS 500 Fifth Street, N.W. Washington, DC 20001 NOTICE: The project that is the subject of this report was approved by the Governing Board of the National Research Council, whose members are drawn from the councils of the Na- tional Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medi- cine. -
EHRM Certificate Program with Clinical Externship C5 (Created 9/3/15)
C.15.5 (Created 07-17-2017) AUBURN OFFIC E OF P ROFESS IONAL A ND CONTINUI NG E D UCATION Office of Professional & Continuing Education 301 OD Smith Hall | Auburn, AL 36849 http://www.auburn.edu/mycaa Contact: Shavon Williams | 334-844-3108; [email protected] Auburn University is an equal opportunity educational institution/employer. Education & Training Plan Electronic Health Records Management Certificate Program with Clinical Externship Student Full Name: Start Date: End Date: Program includes National Certification & a Clinical Externship Opportunity Mentor Supported Electronic Health Records Management (EHRM) Certificate Program with Clinical Externship Course Code: AU-EH 06 Program Duration: 4 Months Contact Hours: 375 Student Tuition: $3,000 The Electronic Health Record Management Profession Access to health information is changing the ways doctors care for patients. With the nation’s healthcare system moving to the electronic medical record, numerous employment opportunities exist for medical assistants, health information systems staff, patient registration professionals and other related positions. Healthcare professionals with the ability to understand, update and maintain the electronic health record are in great demand. The Electronic Health Record Management Program This program prepares students to understand and use electronic records in a medical practice. Course reviews the implementation and management of electronic health information using common electronic data interchange systems and maintaining the medical, legal, accreditation and regulatory requirements of the electronic health record. This Electronic Health Record (EHR) Management program prepares students to understand and use electronic records in a medical practice. Course reviews the implementation and management of electronic health information using common electronic data interchange systems and maintaining the medical, legal, accreditation and regulatory requirements of the electronic health record. -
Accessible Common Alerting Protocol Radio Data System Demonstration: Gulf Coast States Final Report August 2014 1 TABLE of CONTENTS
Accessible Common Alerting Protocol Radio Data System Demonstration: Gulf Coast States Final Report August 2014 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS ....................................................................................................................................................................... 2 2 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS .................................................................................................................................................................... 5 3 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ..................................................................................................................................................................... 6 4 INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................................................................................................. 8 5 METHODOLOGY.................................................................................................................................................................................. 9 6 TECHNICAL CONFIGURATIONS AND TESTING ..................................................................................................................... 10 6.1 Hardware, Ingest Software (INSO) and Software to Monitor INSO (WATCHINSO) ...................................................... 10 Hardware ................................................................................................................................................................................ -
National Library of Medicine Programs and Services FY2013
NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH National Library of Medicine Programs and Services Fiscal Year 2013 US Department of Health and Human Services Public Health Service Bethesda, Maryland National Library of Medicine Catalog in Publication National Library of Medicine (US) National Library of Medicine programs and services.— Bethesda, Md.: The Library, [1978-] 1977 – v.: Report covers fiscal year. Continues: National Library of Medicine (US). Programs and Services. Vols. For 1977-78 issued as DHEW publication; no. (NIH) 78-256, etc.; for 1979-80 as NIH publication; no. 80-256, etc. Vols. 1981 – present Available from the National Technical Information Service, Springfield, Va. Reports for 1997 – present issued also online. ISSN 0163-4569 = National Library of Medicine programs and services. 1. Information Services – United States – Periodicals 2. Libraries, Medical – United States – Periodicals I. Title II. Title: National Library of Medicine programs & services III. Series: DHEW publication; no. 78-256, etc. IV. Series: NIH publication; no. 80-256, etc. Z 675.M4U56an DISCRIMINATION PROHIBITED: Under provisions of applicable public laws enacted by Congress since 1964, no person in the United States shall, on the ground of race, color, national origin, sex, or handicap, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance. In addition, Executive Order 11141 prohibits discrimination on the basis of age by contractors and subcontractors in the performance of Federal contracts. Therefore, the National Library of Medicine must be operated in compliance with these laws and this executive order. ii CONTENTS Preface ........................................................................................................................................................................... v Office of Health Information Programs Development .................................................................................................