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Terminology and Terminological Systems PDF

238 Pages·2012·7.031 MB·English
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Health Informatics Peter L. Elkin Editor Terminology and Terminological Systems Editor Peter L. Elkin, M.D., MACP, FACMI Physician, Researcher and Author New York, NY USA Additional material to this book can be downloaded from http://extras.springer.com ISBN 978-1-4471-2815-1 ISBN 978-1-4471-2816-8 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-1-4471-2816-8 Springer London Heidelberg New York Dordrecht Library of Congress Control Number: 2012937652 © Springer-Verlag London 2012 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifi cally the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illus- trations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfi lms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. Exempted from this legal reservation are brief excerpts in connection with reviews or scholarly analysis or material supplied specifi cally for the purpose of being entered and executed on a computer system, for exclusive use by the purchaser of the work. Duplication of this publication or parts thereof is permitted only under the provisions of the Copyright Law of the Publisher’s location, in its cur- rent version, and permission for use must always be obtained from Springer. Permissions for use may be obtained through RightsLink at the Copyright Clearance Center. Violations are liable to prosecution under the respective Copyright Law. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specifi c statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. While the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication, neither the authors nor the editors nor the publisher can accept any legal responsibil- ity for any errors or omissions that may be made. The publisher makes no warranty, express or implied, with respect to the material contained herein. Printed on acid-free paper Springer is part of Springer Science+Business Media (www.springer.com) It is a sunny day. It was not always sunny in the life of the dedicated physician from southern Pennsylvania. The goals of a lifetime exist mostly in the mind of those who hold them dear. Lifetimes of adjustments and sacrifi ces culminate in a sense of purpose, honor, and dedication. Goals like positively infl uencing the lives of others are relative in time and space to one’s own vision. Happiness predicated on a consistent view of the present and future is irreconcilable with the ever more rapid evolution of the present. Time once the close friend and trusted ally of the thoughtful becomes a consistent reminder of the limits of Man. Dreams may be infi nite, but our capacity to implement them is not. Trusting in the prioritization of others oft leads to a constant pressure toward mediocrity. Comfort can be found in the familiar, so does mediocrity yield the same warm complacency. Struggle though empowering does not lead to happiness. Accomplishments being relative by almost all standards, our struggles are in vane. In this spirit, I submit this work whose timeliness will be limited and whose goal will need to evolve with the sophistication of the student. As a teaching text, it melds history with theory and logic. As a vision, it opens the mind to a greater potential, and it is my profound hope that in the telling I can stimulate thought and progress in the representation of language and the instantiation of thought. I am continually inspired and enthralled with the human mind’s ability to imagine a better future, and I am of the belief that we can create any manifest future that we can imagine. My hope is that this textbook inspires you to make a difference in people’s lives. Herein, we imagine improved healthcare through better organization, dissemination and reasoning about real patient problems, routinely elevated by ubiquitously available medical and ontological knowledge. I dedicate this book to the two great women in my life, my mother Lorretta Elkin who spent her life in dedication to truth and honesty and her children, along with my wife Margaret Ann who has dedicatedly inspired this admitted workaholic. Peter L. Elkin Foreword This book addresses a deep and pervasive paradox. On the one hand, “termi- nology” is central to healthcare. Simply put, education, patient records, labo- ratory testing, procedures, medication, reimbursement, assessment of quality, regulatory compliance, and research could not exist without it. On the other hand, “awareness” of terminology as a rate-limiting resource is low, gener- ally. That terminology is something that could be missing or present, or good or bad, or the subject – in current parlance – of “best practices,” just has not occurred to many outside the relatively narrow confi nes of medical informat- ics. And those within that fi eld have only the literature – spread across many journals and sources – to guide them. The pages that follow put a stake in the ground. As is explained, terminol- ogy comes from somewhere – both historically (millennia) and at present (from various authorities), and it is going somewhere (at this writing, “Meaningful Use” – in the United States – will require it, and attempts to cre- ate international terminology are making progress). Further, terminology is already intimately connected with technology – information technology in particular. As implied in many sections of this book, terminology empowers computers as healthcare strives to catch up with the productive use of infor- mation technology in other fi elds. One reason for the apparent shortfall in the use of information technology in healthcare and in biomedicine – again relative to other domains – is the healthcare and biomedical terminology challenge. First, the magnitude requirements for just lab tests, medications, procedures, and diagnoses dwarf that found in any other signifi cant context, and the burgeoning “naming” requirements for the study and use of “genotype-to-phenotype” links have required the development of distributed provenance mechanisms. Second, the terminologies discussed in this book evolve continuously; authoritative rep- ertoires of names for lab tests and medications change every day, and the names of procedures and diagnoses change annually, and sometimes more often. Third, seemingly obvious terminology-based queries prove to be research problems currently: examples are “What is our (local) experience with patients like mine?” “Which enterprise evidences ‘best practice’ for diagnosis X?” and “What can we learn from aggregating data from multiple sites that we cannot learn from the individual sites?” Those attempting to address these challenges – locally, nationally, or inter- nationally – need to appreciate the ideas discussed in this book. For example, those helping to manage care or research enterprises will be called upon to vii viii Foreword supervise the management of terminology as an asset. Narrowly, terminol- ogy will be an asset because it will be the only way to “normalize” enter- prise care and research data; more broadly, terminology may make explicit what makes the enterprise unique. At this writing, an emerging enterprise imperative is to integrate the terminology used to care for patients with the terminology used to conduct research relevant to those patients; standard terminology will need to coexist with novel names for research driven observations. On an individual and enterprise level, local terminology inno- vation will need to be coordinated with evolving extraproject, and extra- enterprise, terminology authorities. This book could not have been written 20 years ago. Twenty-fi ve years ago, the notion that terminology should be concept-based was all but unknown in healthcare; now, almost all important terminologies are at least partly con- cept-based. In parallel, because there was no general model of what a termi- nology was or should be, there were no tools to support terminology development and maintenance. Steady progress since then has improved both terminology content and the technology and processes used to sustain that content. This is the fi rst book devoted to that story. Students, practitioners, or managers who absorb the material here will have an advantage over their peers who lack it. Near term, terminology will become the bottleneck for the deployment of innovation and the assessment of quality in healthcare; opening that bottleneck will require understanding of elements of this text. Midterm, terminology will be an asset to be leveraged in care and research; for example, interenterprise clinical and research data aggregation – a central topic here – will become a dominant paradigm. Longer-term, but within the professional lives of informatics students who will learn from this book, terminology development and maintenance will become a distributed activity undertaken by individuals and by “crowds” (as in crowd-sourcing). As with software, maintenance will come to dominate creation as an intellectual and operational activity. Emerging “best practices” in terminology – based on many of the ideas covered in this book – will specify how local, distributed, national, and international maintenance should be undertaken productively. Ridgefi eld, CT, USA Mark Samuel Tuttle Nashville, TN, USA Steven H. Brown Series Preface This series is directed to healthcare professionals leading the transformation of healthcare by using information and knowledge. For over 20 years, Health Informatics has offered a broad range of titles: some address specifi c profes- sions such as nursing, medicine, and health administration; others cover spe- cial areas of practice such as trauma and radiology; still other books in the series focus on interdisciplinary issues, such as the computer based patient record, electronic health records, and networked healthcare systems. Editors and authors, eminent experts in their fi elds, offer their accounts of innova- tions in health informatics. Increasingly, these accounts go beyond hardware and software to address the role of information in infl uencing the transforma- tion of healthcare delivery systems around the world. The series also increas- ingly focuses on the users of the information and systems: the organizational, behavioral, and societal changes that accompany the diffusion of information technology in health services environments. Developments in healthcare delivery are constant; in recent years, bioin- formatics has emerged as a new fi eld in health informatics to support emerg- ing and ongoing developments in molecular biology. At the same time, further evolution of the fi eld of health informatics is refl ected in the introduction of concepts at the macro or health systems delivery level with major national initiatives related to electronic health records (EHR), data standards, and public health informatics. These changes will continue to shape health services in the twenty-fi rst century. By making full and creative use of the technology to tame data and to transform information, Health Informatics will foster the development and use of new knowledge in healthcare. ix

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.