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FHIR Encounter

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Encounter scope and definition

Overview of the definition

If we look up Encounter in a dictionary, we find something along these lines: A meeting with a person or thing, especially a casual, unexpected, or brief meeting: "Our running into each other was merely a chance encounter"

However, in the context of Healthcare IT, an Encounter is a mostly planned, non-casual, longer running event: Situation on the uninterrupted course of which one or more health care professionals delivers health care services to a subject of care (from: EN13940:2001, Health informatics -- System of concepts to support continuity of care)

The full scope of Encounter only becomes clear in the definition shared by CCDA and ASTM CCR:

An Encounter is an interaction, regardless of the setting, between a patient and a practitioner who is vested with primary responsibility for diagnosing, evaluating, or treating the patient's condition. It may include visits, appointments, as well as non face-to-face interactions. It is also a contact between a patient and a practitioner who has primary responsibility for assessing and treating the patient at a given contact, exercising independent judgment. (from CCDA, section 4.11).

The "regardless of the setting" is elaborated upon elsewhere in the ASTM CCR document:

An Encounter can be a hospitalization (acute, rehab, nursing facility, or longterm care), office or clinic visit, emergency room visit, home health visit, or any treatment or therapy (physical, occupational, respiratory, or other), or any interaction, even non face-toface, between the patient and the healthcare system or a healthcare provider.

and this is echoed by the current definition from the PA Wiki: An interaction between a patient and healthcare participant(s) for the purpose of providing patient service(s) or assessing the health status of a patient. For example, outpatient visit to multiple departments, home health support (including physical therapy), inpatient hospital stay, emergency room visit, field visit (e.g., traffic accident), office visit, occupational therapy, telephone call.

These "settings" are not necessarily mutually exclusive and can take place at the same time: as an Encounter seems to include longer running hospitalizations, "treatment" settings and face-to-face interactions, multiple "encounters" may be active at the same time.

It should be clear that these are not the only possible definitions, take for example, this one from Microsoft's Connected Health Framework: A consultation, examination, or treatment provided by a care professional typically at a single session or appointment. (from Microsoft Connected Health Framework - Part 2 - Business Framework) or openEHR, where an Encounter is a kind of "Composition", a unit of modification of the EHR, more specifically described as a "record of encounter as a progress note", and "for use to record when a person and clinician interact".

Questions

  • The definitions found on Encounter define its scope as ranging from short home visits to long-term care. Most seem to agree that outpatient visits and inpatient stays are all Encouters. Do we retain this definition?
  • Is Encounter mainly a administrative or logistic concept, or does it include responsibility?
  • Encounters, according to this definition, overlap in time and scope. How do we relate them, e.g. Do we wish to see a doctor visiting an inpatient as an encounter within an encounter? Does moving a patient from a medium-care ward to an intensive-care ward start a new encounter? What about referring a patient to another specialty for consultation? What about an outpatient visiting multiple facilities?
  • CCDA and CCR limit Encounter to "events", the v3 Normative Edition under Patient Administration distinguishes between "Encounter" (=EVN mood) and Appointment (=APT mood). However, there's also scheduling (agenda's, slots, etc). Which of these are in scope?

--Lmckenzi 13:56, 11 March 2013 (UTC)Adding my thoughts here since I won't be on the call. Realistically, you need to support what existing systems do. Some systems will treat moving departments as distinct encounters, some won't. FHIR isn't going to force standardization of existing business practice (though in-so-far as you can standardize the semantics of distinct business practices while still being easy to implement, that'd be a good thing). I think scheduling should be handled as a distinct structure. Switching moods within a single FHIR resource instance should be done with considerable caution.

Rene spronk 15:27, 11 March 2013 (UTC) See Requirements for an Universal Encounter model. Encounter should be event mood only. The issues in my mind are a) how does one find the common attributes of encounters (at all hierarchical levels, all vuewpoints/countries); b) do we wish to express encounter hierarchies in the model, i.e. allow for the referencing of child/parent encounters in the resource, c) how to link an encounter to a clinical encounter grouper such as a concern. Please keep in mind that PV1/PV2, PID-18 (account number), CCDA/CCR are all US-oriented models. As such the v3 models are a much better starting point from a UV realm perspective.

Encounter attributes

Overview of possible attributes

To sketch the contents of the Encounter resource, below is an unordered and possibly inconsistent list of attributes found in CCR, openEHR and HL7v3 RIM for Encounter:

--Lmckenzi 13:58, 11 March 2013 (UTC)Might want to check out PV1/PV2 in v2 as well, seeing as they're the primary mechanism for tracing inpatient encounters most places. (Will definitely want mappings to v2 for this.)

  • Identifier
  • Status
  • Type (in-, outpatient, home, telephone etc.)
  • Admit datetime (effectiveTime)
  • Performer [0..*]
  • Location (Bed/Room/Ward/Unit) / Accomodation
  • Facility (Organization)
  • LocationType
    • Clinic [*]
    • Home [*]
    • Department [*]
    • Nursing unit [*]
    • Provider's office [*]
  • Duration, Frequency
  • Participant [0..*] / Practitioner
  • Indication
  • Description
  • Instructions
  • Consent
  • PatientClass (openEHR) - intended mode of treatment -
    • Inpatient/overnight patient [Inpatient/overnight patient]
    • Same day patient [Same day patient]
    • Outpatient [Outpatient]
    • Emergency patient [Emergency patient]
    • Community client [Community client]
    • Pre-admit [Pre-admit]
    • Commercial account [Commercial account]
    • Not-applicable [Not-applicable]
    • Unknown [Unknown]
  • AdmissionType
    • Accident [Accident]
    • Emergency [Emergency]
    • Labour & Delivery [Labour & Delivery]
    • Routine [Routine]
    • Newborn [Newborn]
    • Urgent [Urgent]
    • Elective [Elective]
    • Geriatric respite admission [Geriatric respite admission]
    • Statistical admission [Statistical admission]
    • Hospitalization
    • Rehabilitation
    • Nursing Facility
    • Emergency Room
    • Clinic Visit
  • PriorLocation (before admission = Organization part + bed/room/ward/unit)
  • AttendingDoctor
  • ReferringDoctor
  • ConsultingDoctor
  • AdmittingDoctor
  • AdmitSource (mode of admission nhdd 000385)
  • DischargeDisposition
  • PreAdmitTest
  • SpecialCourtesies (vip,...)
  • SpecialArrangements (wheelchair, stretcher, interpreter, ...)
  • ResponsibleParty
  • Discharger
  • Transportations (within an organization, or between them)
  • Fullfilled appointment
  • Notification contact
  • Devices (reusable)
  • Location of valuables
  • Previous encounter
  • Movement
    • identifier
    • start/end
    • action code
    • responsible ward