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Longitudinal Coordination of Care (LCC) Workgroup (WG)HL7 Tiger Team Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) Care Coordination Services (CCS)
June 19, 2013
1
Meeting Etiquette
• Remember: If you are not speaking, please keep your phone on mute
• Do not put your phone on hold. If you need to take a call, hang up and dial in again when finished with your other call o Hold = Elevator Music = frustrated speakers and
participants• This meeting is being recorded
o Another reason to keep your phone on mute when not speaking
• Use the “Chat” feature for questions, comments and items you would like the moderator or other participants to know.o Send comments to All Participants so they can
be addressed publically in the chat, or discussed in the meeting (as appropriate).
From S&I Framework to Participants:Hi everyone: remember to keep your phone on mute
All Participants
3
• For this initiative:• Interoperable and shared patient assessments across
multiple disciplines
• Shared patient and team goals and desired outcomes
• Care plans which align, support and inform care delivery regardless of setting or service provider
• For this Tiger Team:• Alignment of HL7 artifacts with LCC artifacts to
support care plan exchange
• HL7 CCS provides Service Oriented Architecture
• Care Plan DAM provides informational structure
• LCC Implementation Guides provide functional requirements
Goals
Agenda
• Introductions
• Goals
• Schedule
• Discussion of Prioritizations
– Ongoing comments can be submitted and viewed on wiki:
• http://wiki.siframework.org/LCC+HL7+Tiger+Team+SWG
• Next Steps
4
Schedule – June 2013SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
11 AM ET: Discussion
Prioritization
9 10 11 12 13 14 1511 AM ET Meeting
Canceled
Tentative Presentation to
HL7 (TBD)
16 17 18 19 20 21 2211 AM ET HL7
Preference and Priority as shown
in DAM
23 24 25 26 27 28 2911 AM ET
Discussion TBD
30
Work Group SchedulesLCC WG
SWG Meeting LCC Leads Date/ Time Projects
LTPAC SWG Larry GarberTerry O'Malley
Weekly Mondays, 11-12pm EST
C-CDA: Transfer Summary, Consult Note, Referral Note
LCC HL7 Tiger Team
Russ Leftwich Weekly Wednesdays, 11- 12pm EST
LCC WG comments for HL7 Care Plan DAM
LCP SWG Bill RussellSue MitchellJennie Harvell
Weekly Thursdays 5-6pm EST
C-CDA: Care Plan, HomeHealth Plan of Care
HL7 WGSWG Meeting HL7 Lead Participating LCC
MembersDate/ Time Projects
HL7 Patient Care WG Russ LeftwichElaine Ayers Stephen Chu Michael Tan Kevin Coonan
Susan Campbell Laura H Langford Lindsey Hoggle
Bi-weekly Weds, 5 -6pm EST
Care Plan DAMCare Coordination Services (CSS)
HL7 Structured Documents WG
Bob DolinBrett Marquard
Sue MitchellJennie Harvell
Weekly Thursdays, 10-12pm EST
CDA (various)
HL7 SOA WG CCS Project Jon Farmer Enrique Meneses (facilitators) Stephen Chu
Susan Campbell Weekly Tuesdays 5 - 6pm EST
Care Coordination Services (CSS)
HL7 Patient Generated Document
Leslie Kelly Hall Weekly Fridays, 12-1pm EST
Patient-authored Clinical Documents
7
• Types of preferences• Communication preferences – who gets what information• Treatment preferences • Diet preferences• End of life preferences (directives)• Other preferences
• Reason for preference• Religious or cultural influence• Belief system• Financial consideration• Recommendation from others• No reason stated
• Strength of preference• Spectrum from absolute to if available
HL7 Discussion– Preferences
8
• Reason for refusal• Established concept in refusing immunization • Value set exists
• “Provider preferences”• Not currently captured• Equivalent of recommendation or rationale• Compared to provider bias
HL7 Definition – Preferences, cont’d…
9
Care Plan DAM – Preference View
class Preferences
CarePreference
+ acceptance :AcceptanceReview [0..*]+ activationCriteria :Criterion [0..*]+ alternatePreferences :CarePreference [0..*] {ordered}+ comments :String+ effectiveDate :DateTime+ expressedBy :Role [1..*]+ media :URL [0..*]+ preference :Code+ reason :Code- strength :LevelType- unfulfi l ledReason :Reason [0..1]
ClinicalObjectReference
Activ ity
+ applicability :TimeRecord [0..1]+ classification :Code+ description :Code+ endDate :DateTime+ frequency :Frequency [0..1]+ functionalArea :Code [0..*]+ postcondition :Criterion [0..*]+ precondition :Criterion [0..*]+ priority :Priority+ startDate :DateTime+ supportiveContent :ClinicalObjectReference [0..*]
Plan
+ clinicalSpecialty :Code [0..*]+ completeDate :DateTime+ confidentiality :ConfidentialityType+ createDate :DateTime+ displayName :String+ effectiveDate :DateTime+ id :Identifier+ latestUpdateDate :DateTime+ planClass :PlanClassType+ version :String
A
Common::ActCareBarrier
+ comments :String+ effectiveDate :DateTime+ observer :Role+ resolvedDate :DateTimeClinicalObjectReference
HealthConcern
+ description :Code+ effectiveTime :DateTime+ expressedBy :Role [1..*]+ priority :Priority [1..*]+ reason :ClinicalObjectReference [0..*]+ resolvedTime :DateTime
Observation
HealthGoal
+ goal :Code+ milestoneGoal :HealthGoal [0..*] {ordered}+ narrative :String+ planStatus :ExecutionStatusType+ priority :Priority [1..*]+ successCriteria :Criterion [0..*]+ targetDate :DateTime
HealthRisk
+ description :Code+ effectiveTime :DateTime+ levelOfRisk :LevelType+ observer :Role+ resolvedTime :DateTime
+replace 0..*
+activePreferences
0..*
+actionStep 0..*{ordered}
+carePreference 0..*
+careBarrier
0..*
+concern
0..*
+targetOutcome 0..*
blocks health goal
+blockedGoal 0..*
addressesConcern
+targetConcern 0..*
+goal
0..*
+presentingRisk
0..*
+presentingRisk *
10
Questions/Comments to PCWG about Preferences• Comment: The value set for advance directives could be
constrained to a link/URL to a single source of truth about an individual’s directives.
• Comment: The phrase here (under Types of Preferences) should be “a preference stated in an advance directive”—because that can be part of the Care Plan—and there should be another whole section called “Advance Directives” that contains all the information including the advance directive preferences, and it’s that section’s job to sort all that data out. To just say “end of life preference” is not specific enough. We need to say a “value that’s derived from an advance directive” and then that’s linked to a repository or document.
• Comment: “Other preferences” under Types of Preferences should probably be listed out/defined.
11
• Data elements with priority• Health Concern• Health Goal• Interventions
• Ranking of priority• Assignment of high-medium-low value set• Not an ordering of list by relative priority• Must you order multiple highs/mediums/lows?
• Allow for different priorities by patient and others• Reason for priority?• Care team members in different settings have different
priorities – does this need to be in care plan model?• Alternate perspective: do care team members have
priorities only for health concerns they associate with
HL7 Discussion – Priority
12
Care Plan DAM – PriorityView
class Priority
ClinicalObjectReference
Activ ity
+ applicability :TimeRecord [0..1]+ classification :Code+ description :Code+ endDate :DateTime+ frequency :Frequency [0..1]+ functionalArea :Code [0..*]+ postcondition :Criterion [0..*]+ precondition :Criterion [0..*]+ priority :Priority+ startDate :DateTime+ supportiveContent
:ClinicalObjectReference [0..*]
ClinicalObjectReference
HealthConcern
+ description :Code+ effectiveTime :DateTime+ expressedBy :Role [1..*]+ priority :Priority [1..*]+ reason :ClinicalObjectReference [0..*]+ resolvedTime :DateTime
HealthGoal
+ goal :Code+ milestoneGoal :HealthGoal [0..*] {ordered}+ narrative :String+ planStatus :ExecutionStatusType+ priority :Priority [1..*]+ successCriteria :Criterion [0..*]+ targetDate :DateTime::Observation+ applicabilityTime :TimeRecord+ capturedTime :DateTime+ description :Code+ historical :Boolean [0..1] = false+ interpretation :Code [0..1]+ method :Code [0..1]+ targetSite :Code [0..1]
Priority
+ effectiveTime :DateTime+ level :LevelType+ source :Role
PlanActiv ity
HealthRisk
+ description :Code+ effectiveTime :DateTime+ levelOfRisk :LevelType+ observer :Role+ resolvedTime :DateTime
Plan
+ clinicalSpecialty :Code [0..*]+ completeDate :DateTime+ confidentiality :ConfidentialityType+ createDate :DateTime+ displayName :String+ effectiveDate :DateTime+ id :Identifier+ latestUpdateDate :DateTime+ planClass :PlanClassType+ version :String A
Common::Act Common::Observation
+ applicabilityTime :TimeRecord+ capturedTime :DateTime+ description :Code+ historical :Boolean [0..1] = false+ interpretation :Code [0..1]+ method :Code [0..1]+ targetSite :Code [0..1]
CareBarrier
+ comments :String+ effectiveDate :DateTime+ observer :Role+ resolvedDate :DateTime
+goal
0..*
+careBarrier 0..*
addressesConcern
+targetConcern
0..*+presentingRisk
*
+proposedAction 1..*
+presentingRisk 0..*
blocks health goal
+blockedGoal 0..*
+presentingRisk 0..*+concern 0..*
+supportGoal0..*
+replace 0..*
+targetOutcome
0..*
+actionStep 0..*{ordered}
+mitigatesRisk 0..*
+goalTarget
0..*
+replace 0..1 +evidence 0..*
13
Questions/Comments to PCWG about Priority
• Comment: Priority should not be included in interventions. Actions that were considered and not chosen as part of the intervention should definitely be included, but they should go elsewhere in the Care Plan.
• Comment: Interventions are the evidence of input by a particular discipline and are assigned to a particular discipline, so whether the discipline thinks it was important or not does not need to be included in the Care Plan output.
• Comment: A text field should be added with priority so that comments can be captured with priority rankings.
Proposed Next Steps
• Next Touch Point meeting with PCWG is TBD• Update discussion schedule• Finalize LCC’s Comments by August 4, 2013 for
submittal as part of September Ballot
15
Contact Information
We’re here to help. Please contact us if you have questions, comments, or would like to join other projects.
• S&I Initiative Coordinator• Evelyn Gallego [email protected]
• Sub Work Group Lead• Russ Leftwich [email protected]
• Program Management• Lynette Elliott [email protected]• Becky Angeles [email protected]
16
Background Slides
17
3.4 Observation, Condition, Diagnosis, ConcernNOTE: The HL7 Patient Care Technical Committee is developing a formal model for
condition tracking. The examples provided here are greatly simplified so as to illustrate certain aspects of SNOMED CT implementation.
Observations, Conditions, Diagnoses, and Concerns are often confused, but in fact have distinct definitions and patterns.
"Observation" and "Condition": An HL7 observation is something noted and recorded as an isolated event, whereas an HL7 condition is an ongoing event. Symptoms and findings (also know as signs) are observations. The distinction between "seizure" and "epilepsy" or between "allergic reaction" and "allergy" is that the former is an observation, and the latter is a condition.
SNOMED CT distinguishes between "Clinical Findings" and "Diseases", where a SNOMED CT disease is a kind of SNOMED CT clinical finding that is necessarily abnormal:
[ 404684003 | Clinical finding ][ 64572001 | Disease ]
SNOMED IG Definitions
Continued on next slide
18
The SNOMED CT finding/disease distinction is orthogonal to the HL7 observation/condition distinction, thus a SNOMED CT finding or disease can be an HL7 observation or condition.
"Diagnosis": The term "diagnosis" has many clinical and administrative meanings in healthcare
A diagnosis is the result of a cognitive process whereby signs, symptoms, test results, and other relevant data are evaluated to determine the condition afflicting a patient.
A diagnosis often directs administrative and clinical workflow, where for instance the assertion of an admission diagnosis establishes care paths, order sets, etc.
A diagnosis is often something that is billed for in a clinical encounter. In such a scenario, an application typically has a defined context where the billable object gets entered.
"Concern": A concern is something that a clinician is particularly interested in and wants to track. It has important patient management use cases (e.g. health records often present the problem list or list of concerns as a way of summarizing a patient's medical history).
SNOMED IG Definitions, cont’d…
Continued on next slide
19
Differentiation of Observation, Condition, Diagnosis, and Concern in common patterns:
"Observation" and "Condition": The distinction between an HL7 Observation and HL7 Condition is made by setting the Act.classCode to "OBS" or "COND", respectively. The distinction between a SNOMED finding and SNOMED disease is based on the location of the concept in the SNOMED CT hierarchy. There is no flag in a clinical statement instance for distinguishing between a SNOMED CT finding vs. disease.
"Diagnosis":Result of a cognitive process: Could potentially be Indicated by post-coordinating a
SNOMED CT finding method attribute with a procedure such as "cognitive process".Directs administrative and clinical workflow: These use cases typically rely more on the
context in which the diagnoses are entered (e.g. where an order set has a field designated for the admission diagnosis). In such a case, the distinction of a (particular kind of) diagnosis is that it occurs within a particular organizer (e.g. a condition within an Admission Diagnosis section is an admission diagnosis from an administrative perspective).
Something that is billed for: The fact that something was billed for would be expressed in another HL7 message. There is nothing in the pattern for a diagnosis that says whether or not it was or can be billed for.
SNOMED IG Definitions, cont’d…
Continued on next slide
20
"Concern": The HL7 Patient Care Technical Committee is developing a formal model for condition tracking. In that model, a problem (which may be an Observation, a Procedure, or some other type of Act) is wrapped in an Act with a new Act.classCode “CONCERN”. The focus in this guide is on the use of SNOMED CT, whereas the Patient Care condition tracking model is the definitive source for the overall structure of a problem list.
It should be noted that the administrative representation of a diagnosis and the representation of a concern break the rules from section 3.1.1 Observations vs. Organizers, in that these designations are based on context, whereas the designation of something as an Observation vs. Condition is inherent in the clinical statement itself.
SNOMED IG Definitions, cont’d…
21
HL7 v3 SNOMED CT Definitions• 3.4 Observation, Condition, Diagnosis, Concern
• NOTE: The HL7 Patient Care Technical Committee is developing a formal model for condition tracking. The examples provided here are greatly simplified so as to illustrate certain aspects of SNOMED CT implementation.
• Observations, Conditions, Diagnoses, and Concerns are often confused, but in fact have distinct definitions and patterns.• "Observation" and "Condition": An HL7 observation is something noted
and recorded as an isolated event, whereas an HL7 condition is an ongoing event. Symptoms and findings (also know as signs) are observations. The distinction between "seizure" and "epilepsy" or between "allergic reaction" and "allergy" is that the former is an observation, and the latter is a condition.
• SNOMED CT distinguishes between "Clinical Findings" and "Diseases", where a SNOMED CT disease is a kind of SNOMED CT clinical finding that is necessarily abnormal:
• [ 404684003 | Clinical finding ]• [ 64572001 | Disease ]
22
HL7 v3 SNOMED CT Definitions, cont’d…• "Diagnosis": The term "diagnosis" has many clinical and
administrative meanings in healthcare• A diagnosis is the result of a cognitive process whereby signs,
symptoms, test results, and other relevant data are evaluated to determine the condition afflicting a patient.
• A diagnosis often directs administrative and clinical workflow, where for instance the assertion of an admission diagnosis establishes care paths, order sets, etc.
• A diagnosis is often something that is billed for in a clinical encounter. In such a scenario, an application typically has a defined context where the billable object gets entered.
• "Concern": A concern is something that a clinician is particularly interested in and wants to track. It has important patient management use cases (e.g. health records often present the problem list or list of concerns as a way of summarizing a patient's medical history).
23
HL7 v3 SNOMED CT Definitions, cont’d…• Differentiation of Observation, Condition, Diagnosis, and Concern in
common patterns:• "Observation" and "Condition": The distinction between an HL7
Observation and HL7 Condition is made by setting the Act.classCode to "OBS" or "COND", respectively. The distinction between a SNOMED finding and SNOMED disease is based on the location of the concept in the SNOMED CT hierarchy. There is no flag in a clinical statement instance for distinguishing between a SNOMED CT finding vs. disease.
• "Diagnosis":• Result of a cognitive process: Could potentially be Indicated by post-
coordinating a SNOMED CT finding method attribute with a procedure such as "cognitive process".
• Directs administrative and clinical workflow: These use cases typically rely more on the context in which the diagnoses are entered (e.g. where an order set has a field designated for the admission diagnosis). In such a case, the distinction of a (particular kind of) diagnosis is that it occurs within a particular organizer (e.g. a condition within an Admission Diagnosis section is an admission diagnosis from an administrative perspective).
24
HL7 v3 SNOMED CT Definitions, cont’d…
• Differentiation of Observation, Condition, Diagnosis, and Concern in common patterns:• "Observation" and "Condition": The distinction between an HL7 Observation
and HL7 Condition is made by setting the Act.classCode to "OBS" or "COND", respectively. The distinction between a SNOMED finding and SNOMED disease is based on the location of the concept in the SNOMED CT hierarchy. There is no flag in a clinical statement instance for distinguishing between a SNOMED CT finding vs. disease.
• "Diagnosis“: Result of a cognitive process: Could potentially be Indicated by post-coordinating a SNOMED CT finding method attribute with a procedure such as "cognitive process".
• Directs administrative and clinical workflow: These use cases typically rely more on the context in which the diagnoses are entered (e.g. where an order set has a field designated for the admission diagnosis). In such a case, the distinction of a (particular kind of) diagnosis is that it occurs within a particular organizer (e.g. a condition within an Admission Diagnosis section is an admission diagnosis from an administrative perspective).
• Something that is billed for: The fact that something was billed for would be expressed in another HL7 message. There is nothing in the pattern for a diagnosis that says whether or not it was or can be billed for.
25
HL7 v3 SNOMED CT Definitions, cont’d…
• "Concern": The HL7 Patient Care Technical Committee is developing a formal model for condition tracking. In that model, a problem (which may be an Observation, a Procedure, or some other type of Act) is wrapped in an Act with a new Act.classCode “CONCERN”. The focus in this guide is on the use of SNOMED CT, whereas the Patient Care condition tracking model is the definitive source for the overall structure of a problem list.• It should be noted that the administrative representation of a
diagnosis and the representation of a concern break the rules from section 3.1.1 Observations vs. Organizers, in that these designations are based on context, whereas the designation of something as an Observation vs. Condition is inherent in the clinical statement itself.
26
HL7 v3 SNOMED CT XML Examples: Clinical Finding
• Example 16. Assertion of a clinical finding<observation classCode="OBS" moodCode="EVN"> <code code="ASSERTION"
codeSystem="2.16.840.1.113883.5.4"/> <text>Headache</text> <value xsi:type="CD" code="25064002|Headache|"
codeSystem="2.16.840.1.113883.6.96"> <displayName value="Headache"/> </value></observation>
• The observation is asserting a clinical finding of "headache".
27
HL7 v3 SNOMED CT XML Examples: Diagnosis
• Example 17. Context-dependent (administrative) assertion of a diagnosis<act classCode="DOCSECT" moodCode="EVN"> <code code="8646-2" codeSystem="2.16.840.1.113883.6.1"
codeSystemName="LOINC"/> <title>Hospital Admission Diagnosis</title> <text>Hospital admission diagnosis of headache</text> <actRelationship typeCode="COMP"> <observation classCode="OBS" moodCode="EVN"> <code code="ASSERTION" codeSystem="2.16.840.1.113883.5.4"/> <value xsi:type="CD" code="25064002|Headache|"
codeSystem="2.16.840.1.113883.6.96"> <displayName="Headache"/> </value> </observation> </actRelationship></act>
• That a given diagnosis is, for instance, an Admission Diagnosis, can be asserted by wrapping the observation within a particular organizer.
28
HL7 v3 SNOMED CT XML Examples: Concerns
• Example 18. Example of a problem list containing concerns<act classCode="DOCSECT" moodCode="EVN"> <code code="11450-4" codeSystem="2.16.840.1.113883.6.1"
codeSystemName="LOINC"/> <title>Problem List</title> <text> <list> <item>Headache</item> <item>Osteoarthritis of knee</item> </list> </text> <actRelationship typeCode="COMP"> <act classCode="CONCERN" moodCode="EVN"> <actRelationship typeCode="SUBJ"> <observation classCode="OBS" moodCode="EVN"> <code code="ASSERTION" codeSystem="2.16.840.1.113883.5.4"/> <value xsi:type="CD" code="25064002|Headache|"
codeSystem="2.16.840.1.113883.6.96"> <displayName value="Headache"/> </value> </observation> </actRelationship> </act>
29
HL7 v3 SNOMED CT XML Examples: Concerns, cont’d…
</actRelationship> <actRelationship typeCode="COMP"> <act classCode="CONCERN" moodCode="EVN"> <actRelationship typeCode="SUBJ"> <observation classCode="OBS" moodCode="EVN"> <code code="ASSERTION" codeSystem="2.16.840.1.113883.5.4"/> <value xsi:type="CD" code="239873007|Osteoarthritis of knee|"
codeSystem="2.16.840.1.113883.6.96"> <displayName value="Osteoarthritis of knee"/> </value> </observation> </actRelationship> </act> </actRelationship></act>.
• That a given clinical statement is a part of a condition tracking structure can be asserted by containing the clinical statement within the concern act, using the mechanism defined by the HL7 Patient Care Technical Committee, as shown here.