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First published February 5, 2004 as JAMIA PrePrint; doi:10.1197/jamia.M1085
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association 2004;11(3):186-194
© 2004 American Medical Informatics Association


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Submitted on January 27, 2002
Accepted on January 23, 2004

Development of a provisional domain model for the nursing process for use within the Health Level 7 RIM

William Goossen1*, Judy Ozbolt2, Amy Coenen3, Hyeoun-Ae Park4, Charles Mead5, Margareta Ehnfors6, and Heimar Marin7

Affiliation of the authors: 1 Acquest Research & Development, The Netherlands; University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA; 2 Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN; 3 ICNP program director, ICN Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI; 4 Seoul National University, Korea; 5 University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA; HL7 modeling team, and Oracle Corporation; 6 Orebro University, Sweden; 7 Federal University of Sao Paulo, Brazil

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.

Objective Since 1999, the Nursing Terminology Summits have promoted the development, evaluation, and use of reference terminology for nursing and its integration into comprehensive health care data standards. The use of such standards to represent nursing knowledge, terminology, processes, and information in electronic health records will enhance continuity of care, decision support, and the exchange of comparable patient information. As part of this activity, working groups at the 2001, 2002, and 2003 Summit Conferences examined how to represent nursing information in the Health Level 7 (HL7) Reference Information Model (RIM).

Design The working groups represented the nursing process as a dynamic sequence of phases, each containing information specific to the activities of the phase. They used Universal Modeling Language (UML) to represent this domain knowledge in models. An Activity Diagram was used to create a dynamic model of the nursing process. After creating a structural model of the information used at each stage of the nursing process, the working groups mapped that information to the HL7 RIM. They used a hierarchical structure for the organization of nursing knowledge as the basis for a hierarchical model for Findings about the patient. The modeling and mapping reported here were exploratory and preliminary, not exhaustive or definitive. The intent was to evaluate the feasibility of representing some types of nursing information consistently with HL7 standards.

Measurements The working groups conducted a small-scale validation by testing examples of nursing terminology against the HL7 RIM class Observation.

Results It was feasible to map patient information from the proposed models to the RIM subclass Observation. Examples illustrate the models and the mapping of nursing terminology to the HL7 RIM.

Conclusion It is possible to model and map nursing information into the comprehensive healthcare information model, the HL7 RIM. These models must evolve and undergo further validation by clinicians. The integration of nursing information, terminology, and processes in information models is a first step toward rendering nursing information machine-readable in electronic patient records and messages. An eventual practical result, after much more development, would be to create computable, structured information for nursing documentation.




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T. H. Payne and G. Graham
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[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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