Comparative analysis of the VA/Kaiser and NLM CORE problem subsets: an empirical study based on problem frequency.

Adam Wright, Joshua Feblowitz, Allison B McCoy, Dean F Sittig

Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.

Journal Article: AMIA ... Annual Symposium proceedings / AMIA Symposium. AMIA Symposium 01/2011; 2011:1532-40.

Abstract

The problem list is a critical component of the electronic medical record, with implications for clinical care, provider communication, clinical decision support, quality measurement and research. However, many of its benefits depend on the use of coded terminologies. Two standard terminologies (ICD-9 and SNOMED-CT) are available for problem documentation, and two SNOMED-CT subsets (VA/KP and CORE) are available for SNOMED-CT users. We set out to examine these subsets, characterize their overlap and measure their coverage. We applied the subsets to a random sample of 100,000 records from Brigham and Women's Hospital to determine the proportion of problems covered. Though CORE is smaller (5,814 terms vs. 17,761 terms for VA/KP), 94.8% of coded problem entries from BWH were in the CORE subset, while only 84.0% of entries had matches in VA/KP (p<0.001). Though both subsets had reasonable coverage, CORE was superior in our sample, and had fewer clinically significant gaps.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

clinical care
 
clinical decision support
 
clinically significant gaps
 
CORE subset
 
critical component
 
electronic medical record
 
ICD-9
 
problem documentation
 
problem entries
 
problem list
 
problems
 
provider communication
 
quality measurement
 
random sample
 
SNOMED-CT subsets
 
SNOMED-CT users
 
standard terminologies
 
terminologies
 
VA/KP
 
Women's Hospital