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Medical classification

A medical classification is used to transform descriptions of medical diagnoses or procedures into standardized statistical code in a process known as clinical coding. Diagnosis classifications list diagnosis codes, which are used to track diseases and other health conditions, inclusive of chronic diseases such as diabetes mellitus and heart disease, and infectious diseases such as norovirus, the flu, and athlete's foot. Procedure classifications list procedure code, which are used to capture interventional data. These diagnosis and procedure codes are used by health care providers, government health programs, private health insurance companies, workers' compensation carriers, software developers, and others for a variety of applications in medicine, public health and medical informatics, including:

There are country specific standards and international classification systems.

Classification types Edit

Many different medical classifications exist, though they occur into two main groupings: Statistical classifications and Nomenclatures.

A statistical classification brings together similar clinical concepts and groups them into categories. The number of categories is limited so that the classification does not become too big. An example of this is used by the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (known as ICD). ICD-10 groups diseases of the circulatory system into one "chapter," known as Chapter IX, covering codes I00–I99. One of the codes in this chapter (I47.1) has the code title (rubric) Supraventricular tachycardia. However, there are several other clinical concepts that are also classified here. Among them are paroxysmal atrial tachycardia, paroxysmal junctional tachycardia, auricular tachycardia and nodal tachycardia.

Another feature of statistical classifications is the provision of residual categories for "other" and "unspecified" conditions that do not have a specific category in the particular classification.

In a nomenclature there is a separate listing and code for every clinical concept. So, in the previous example, each of the tachycardia listed would have its own code. This makes nomenclatures unwieldy for compiling health statistics.

Types of coding systems specific to health care include:

WHO Family of International Classifications Edit

The World Health Organization (WHO) maintains several internationally endorsed classifications designed to facilitate the comparison of health related data within and across populations and over time as well as the compilation of nationally consistent data.[2] This "Family of International Classifications" (FIC) include three main (or reference) classifications on basic parameters of health prepared by the organization and approved by the World Health Assembly for international use, as well as a number of derived and related classifications providing additional details. Some of these international standards have been revised and adapted by various countries for national use.

Reference classifications Edit

Derived classifications Edit

Derived classifications are based on the WHO reference classifications (i.e. ICD and ICF).[2] They include the following:

  • International Classification of Diseases for Oncology, Third Edition (ICD-O-3)
  • The ICD-10 Classification of Mental and Behavioural Disorders – This publication deals exclusively with Chapter V of ICD-10,[6] and is available as two variants;
    • Clinical descriptions and diagnostic guidelines,[7] also known as the blue book.[6]
    • Diagnostic criteria for research,[8] also known as the green book.[6]
  • Application of the International Classification of Diseases to Dentistry and Stomatology, 3rd Edition (ICD-DA)[9]
  • Application of the International Classification of Diseases to Neurology (ICD-10-NA)[10]
  • EUROCAT is an extension of the ICD-10 Chapter XVII, which covers congenital disorders.

National versions Edit

Several countries have developed their own version of WHO-FIC publications, which go beyond a local language translation. Many of these are based on the ICD:

Related classifications Edit

Related classifications in the WHO-FIC are those that partially refer to the reference classifications, e.g. only at specific levels.[2] They include:

Historic FIC classifications Edit

ICD versions before ICD-9 are not in use anywhere.[16] ICD-9 was published in 1977, and superseded by ICD-10 in 1994. The last version of ICD-10 was published in 2019, and it was replaced by ICD-11 on 1 January 2022.[17] As of February 2022, 35 of the 194 member states have made the transition to the latest version of the ICD.[18]

The International Classification of Procedures in Medicine (ICPM) is a procedural classification that has not updated since 1989, and will be replaced by ICHI.[19] National adaptions of the ICPM includes OPS-301, which is the official German procedural classification.[20]

International Classification of External Causes of Injury (ICECI) was last updated in 2003 and, with the development ICD-11, is no longer maintained.[21] The concepts of ICECI are represented within ICD-11 as extension codes.

Other medical classifications Edit

Diagnosis Edit

The categories in a diagnosis classification classify diseases, disorders, symptoms and medical signs. In addition to the ICD and its national variants, they include:

Procedure Edit

The categories in a procedure classification classify specific health interventions undertaken by health professionals. In addition to the ICHI and ICPC, they include:

Drugs Edit

Drugs are often grouped into drug classes. Such classifications include:

National Drug File-Reference Terminology (NDF-RT) Edit

National Drug File-Reference Terminology was a terminology maintained by the Veterans Health Administration (VHA). It groups drug concepts into classes. It was part of RxNorm until March 2018.

Medication Reference Terminology (MED-RT) Edit

Medication Reference Terminology (MED-RT) is a terminology created and maintained by Veterans Health Administration in the United States.[24] In 2018, it replaced NDF-RT that was used during 2005–2017. Med-RT is not included in RxNorm but is included in National Library of Medicine's UMLS Metathesaurus. Prior 2017, NDF-RT was included in RxNorm. The first release of MED-RT was in the spring of 2018.[25]

The United States Food and Drug Administration requires in its Manual of Policies and Procedures (MaPP) 7400.13 dated July 18, 2013 and updated on July 25, 2018, that MED-RT be used for selecting an established pharmacologic class (EPC) for the Highlights of Prescribing Information in drug labeling. Each EPC text phrase is associated with a term known as an EPC concept. EPC concepts use a standardized format derived from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health Administration (VHA) Medication Reference Terminology (MED-RT). Each EPC concept also has a unique standardized alphanumeric identifier code, used as the machine-readable tag for the concept. These codes enable SPL indexing. The exact EPC text phrase used in INDICATIONS AND USAGE in Highlights might not be identical to the wording used to describe the EPC concept, because the standardized language used for the EPC concept might not be considered sufficiently clear to the readers of the labeling. Each active moiety also may be assigned MOA, PE, and CS standardized indexing concepts, which are also linked to unique standardized alphanumeric identifier codes. MOA, PE, and CS standardized indexing concepts may or may not be related to the therapeutic effect of the active moiety for a particular indication, but they should still be scientifically valid and clinically meaningful. Even if the MOA, PE, and CS standardized indexing concepts are not known with certainty to be related to the therapeutic effect, they may still be useful for identifying drug interactions and permitting other safety assessments for a moiety based upon appropriate and relevant considerations, such as enzyme inhibition and enzyme induction. MOA, PE, and CS concepts are maintained in a standardized format as part of the MED-RT hierarchy. https://www.fda.gov/media/86437/download

The United States Food and Drug Administration Study Data Technical Conformance Guide dated July 2020 states, "6.5 Pharmacologic Class 6.5.1 Medication Reference Terminology 6.5.1.1 General Considerations The Veterans Administration's Medication Reference Terminology (MED-RT) should be used to identify the pharmacologic class(es) of all active investigational substances that are used in a study (either clinical or nonclinical). This information should be provided in the SDTM TS domain when a full TS is indicated. The information should be provided as one or more records in TS, where TSPARMCD= PCLAS. Pharmacologic class is a complex concept that is made up of one or more component concepts: mechanism of action (MOA), physiologic effect (PE), and chemical structure (CS).51 The established pharmacologic class is generally the MOA, PE, or CS term that is considered the most scientifically valid and clinically meaningful. Sponsors should include in TS (the full TS) the established pharmacologic class of all active moieties of investigational products used in a study. FDA maintains a list of established pharmacologic classes of approved moieties.52 If the established pharmacologic class is not available for an active moiety, then the sponsor should discuss the appropriate MOA, PE, and CS terms with the review division. For unapproved investigational active moieties where the pharmacologic class is unknown, the PCLAS record may not be available." https://www.fda.gov/media/136460/download

The United States Food and Drug Administration publishes a Data Standards Catalog that lists the data standards and terminologies that FDA supports for use in regulatory submissions to better enable the evaluation of safety, effectiveness, and quality of FDA-regulated products. In addition, the FDA has the statutory and regulatory authority to require certain standards and terminologies and these are identified in the Catalog with the date the requirement begins and, as needed, the date the requirement ends, and information sources. The submission of data using standards or terminologies not listed in the Catalog should be discussed with the Agency in advance. Where the Catalog expresses support for more than one standard or terminology for a specific use, the sponsor or applicant may select one to use or can discuss, as appropriate, with their review division. Version 7.0 of the FDA Data Standards Catalog dated 03-15-2021, specifies that MED-RT was a required terminology by the White House Consolidated Health Informatics Initiative in various Federal Register Notices beginning as early as May 6, 2004, for NDAs, ANDAs, and certain BLAs beginning on December 17, 2016, and for certain IND's beginning on December 17, 2017. https://www.fda.gov/media/85137/download

Medical Devices Edit

Other Edit

Library classification that have medical components Edit

ICD, SNOMED and Electronic Health Record (EHR) Edit

SNOMED Edit

The Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine (SNOMED) is the most widely recognised nomenclature in healthcare.[27] Its current version, SNOMED Clinical Terms (SNOMED CT), is intended to provide a set of concepts and relationships that offers a common reference point for comparison and aggregation of data about the health care process.[28] SNOMED CT is often described as a reference terminology.[29] SNOMED CT contains more than 311,000 active concepts with unique meanings and formal logic-based definitions organised into hierarchies.[28] SNOMED CT can be used by anyone with an Affiliate License, 40 low income countries defined by the World Bank or qualifying research, humanitarian and charitable projects.[28] SNOMED CT is designed to be managed by computer, and it is a complex relationship concepts.[27]

ICD Edit

The International Classification of Disease (ICD) is the most widely recognized medical classification. Maintained by the World Health Organization (WHO),[30] its primary purpose is to categorise diseases for morbidity and mortality reporting. However the coded data is often used for other purposes too; including reimbursement practices such as medical billing. ICD has a hierarchical structure, and coding in this context, is the term applied when representations are assigned to the words they represent.[30] Coding diagnoses and procedures is the assignment of codes from a code set that follows the rules of the underlying classification or other coding guidelines. The current version of the ICD, ICD-10, was endorsed by WHO in 1990. WHO Member states began using the ICD-10 classification system from 1994 for both morbidity and mortality reporting. The exception was the US, who only began using it for reporting mortality in 1999 whilst continuing to use ICD-9-CM for morbidity reporting. The US only adopted its version of ICD-10 in October 2015. The delay meant it was unable to compare US morbidity data with the rest of the world during this period. The next major version of the ICD, ICD-11, was ratified by the 72nd World Health Assembly on 25 May 2019, and member countries have been able to report data using ICD-11 codes since 1 January 2022.[17]ICD-11 is a fully digital product with integration of clinical terminology and classification. It allows documentation at any level of detail. It includes extension codes, a terminology system, with medicaments, chemicals, infections agents, histopathology, anatomy and mechanisms, objects and animals, and other elements that serve to describe sources of injury or harm.

Comparison Edit

SNOMED CT and ICD were originally designed for different purposes and each should be used for the purposes for which they were designed.[31] As a core terminology for the EHR, SNOMED CT and ICD-11 provide a common language that enables a consistent way of capturing, and sharing health data across specialities and sites of care. SNOMED is a highly detailed terminology designed for input not reporting, without a specific use case. ICD-11 and SNOMED, are clinically based, and document whatever is needed for patient care. In contrast to SNOMED, ICD-11 allows full clinical documentation while permitting internationally agreed statistical aggregation for specific use cases. The foundation of ICD-11 together with the WHO Classification of Health Interventions (ICHI) and the WHO Classification for Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF), comprising also the WHO lists of anatomy, substances and more, are a complete ecosystem for lossless documentation in digital records and at the same time they address specific usecases for data aggregation in a multilingual, freely usable way. SNOMED CT and ICD are used directly by healthcare providers during the process of care,[32] in addition, ICD can be also used for coding after the episode of care, in lower technology environments. SNOMED CT has multiple hierarchy, whereas there is single primary hierarchy for ICD-11 with alternative multiple hierarchies. SNOMED CT concepts are defined logically by their attributes, as is the case in ICD-11, that in addition has textual rules and definitions.

Data Mapping Edit

SNOMED and ICD can be coordinated. The National Library of Medicine (NLM) maps ICD-9-CM, ICD-10-CM, ICD-10-PCS, and other classification systems to SNOMED.[33] Data Mapping is the process of identifying relationships between two distinct data models.[30]

Veterinary medical coding Edit

Veterinary medical codes include the VeNom Coding Group, the U.S. Animal Hospital Codes, and the Veterinary Extension to SNOMED CT (VetSCT).[citation needed]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c "ICD - ICD-10-CM - International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification". Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 2020-07-17. Retrieved 2020-11-04.
  2. ^ a b c . World Health Organization. World Health Organization. Archived from the original on October 3, 2004. Retrieved 12 July 2011.
  3. ^ "International Classification of Diseases (ICD)". World Health Organization. World Health Organization.
  4. ^ "WHO | International Classification of Diseases, 11th Revision (ICD-11)". WHO. Retrieved 2022-06-02.
  5. ^ "ICD-11 tools".
  6. ^ a b c "ICD-10-CM Release for 2014 now available". Dx Revision Watch. 2013-07-12. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
  7. ^ "The ICD-10 Classification of Mental and Behavioural Disorders, Clinical descriptions and diagnostic guidelines" (PDF). World Health Organization.
  8. ^ "The ICD-10 Classification of Mental and Behavioural Disorders, Diagnostic criteria for research" (PDF). World Health Organization.
  9. ^ Bezroukov V (February 1979). "The application of the International Classification of Diseases to dentistry and stomatology". Community Dent Oral Epidemiol. 7 (1): 21–4. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0528.1979.tb01180.x. PMID 282953.
  10. ^ van Drimmelen-Krabbe JJ, Bradley WG, Orgogozo JM, Sartorius N (November 1998). "The application of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases to neurology: ICD-10 NA". J. Neurol. Sci. 161 (1): 2–9. doi:10.1016/S0022-510X(98)00217-2. PMID 9879674. S2CID 12754467.
  11. ^ "Get ready for the end of ICD-10 'flexibilities'". Modern Healthcare. Retrieved 2016-10-16.
  12. ^ Killewo, Japhet; Heggenhougen, Kristian; Quah, Stella R. (2010). Epidemiology and Demography in Public Health. Academic Press. ISBN 9780123822017. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  13. ^ "ICPC-2". World Health Organization.
  14. ^ Assistive products for persons with disability. Classification and terminology. 30 November 2016. ISBN 9780539089127. Retrieved 2 June 2022.
  15. ^ "International Classification for Nursing Practice (ICNP)". World Health Organization.
  16. ^ "ICD - ICD-9 - International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision". Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 2019-03-01. Retrieved 2020-11-04.
  17. ^ a b "WHO releases new International Classification of Diseases (ICD 11)". World Health Organization. Retrieved 9 May 2020.
  18. ^ "ICD-11 2022 release". World Health Organization. Retrieved 2 June 2022.
  19. ^ "International Classification of Health Interventions (ICHI)". World Health Organization. World Health Organization. Retrieved 8 September 2015.
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 October 2015. Retrieved 8 September 2015.
  21. ^ "ICECI". World Health Organization.
  22. ^ Olesen, Jes (2004). "The International Classification of Headache Disorders: 2nd edition". Cephalalgia. 24 (Suppl 1): 9–160. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2982.2003.00824.x. PMID 14979299. S2CID 208214505.
  23. ^ Canadian Classification of Health Interventions. CCI.
  24. ^ "National Drug File – Reference Terminology (NDF-RT™) Documentation" (PDF). U.S. Veterans Health Administration.
  25. ^ "Introduction to MED-RT as the Replacement for NDF-RT" (PDF). U.S. Veterans Health Administration.
  26. ^ IMDRF UDI Guidance Unique Device Identification (UDI) of Medical Devices 9.2.8.
  27. ^ a b "SNOMED International". ihtsdo.org. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  28. ^ a b c "FAQs: Inclusion of SNOMED CT in the UMLS". nih.gov. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  29. ^ Office, Publications. "SNOMED CT – Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine". sydney.edu.au. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  30. ^ a b c Margret K. Amatayakul, MBA, RHIA, CHPS, CPHIT, CPEHR&FHIMSS.(2009).Electronic Health Records: A Practical Guide for Professionals and Organizations.Chicago, America:AHIMA
  31. ^ "Why SNOMED cannot replace the ICD-10-CM/PCS code sets". icd10watch.com. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  32. ^ "ICD-11 | Implementation or Transition Guide" (PDF). World Health Organization. p. 14. Retrieved 1 June 2022. Certain countries currently use automated coding
  33. ^ . who.int. Archived from the original on October 23, 2012. Retrieved 17 January 2017.

External links Edit

  • official site
  • Medical terminologies at the National Library of Medicine
  • The International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation – SNOMED CT

medical, classification, medical, classification, used, transform, descriptions, medical, diagnoses, procedures, into, standardized, statistical, code, process, known, clinical, coding, diagnosis, classifications, list, diagnosis, codes, which, used, track, di. A medical classification is used to transform descriptions of medical diagnoses or procedures into standardized statistical code in a process known as clinical coding Diagnosis classifications list diagnosis codes which are used to track diseases and other health conditions inclusive of chronic diseases such as diabetes mellitus and heart disease and infectious diseases such as norovirus the flu and athlete s foot Procedure classifications list procedure code which are used to capture interventional data These diagnosis and procedure codes are used by health care providers government health programs private health insurance companies workers compensation carriers software developers and others for a variety of applications in medicine public health and medical informatics including statistical analysis of diseases and therapeutic actions reimbursement e g to process claims in medical billing based on diagnosis related groups knowledge based and decision support systems direct surveillance of epidemic or pandemic outbreaksThere are country specific standards and international classification systems Contents 1 Classification types 2 WHO Family of International Classifications 2 1 Reference classifications 2 2 Derived classifications 2 2 1 National versions 2 3 Related classifications 2 4 Historic FIC classifications 3 Other medical classifications 3 1 Diagnosis 3 2 Procedure 3 3 Drugs 3 3 1 National Drug File Reference Terminology NDF RT 3 3 2 Medication Reference Terminology MED RT 3 4 Medical Devices 3 5 Other 3 5 1 Library classification that have medical components 4 ICD SNOMED and Electronic Health Record EHR 4 1 SNOMED 4 2 ICD 4 3 Comparison 4 4 Data Mapping 5 Veterinary medical coding 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksClassification types EditMany different medical classifications exist though they occur into two main groupings Statistical classifications and Nomenclatures A statistical classification brings together similar clinical concepts and groups them into categories The number of categories is limited so that the classification does not become too big An example of this is used by the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems known as ICD ICD 10 groups diseases of the circulatory system into one chapter known as Chapter IX covering codes I00 I99 One of the codes in this chapter I47 1 has the code title rubric Supraventricular tachycardia However there are several other clinical concepts that are also classified here Among them are paroxysmal atrial tachycardia paroxysmal junctional tachycardia auricular tachycardia and nodal tachycardia Another feature of statistical classifications is the provision of residual categories for other and unspecified conditions that do not have a specific category in the particular classification In a nomenclature there is a separate listing and code for every clinical concept So in the previous example each of the tachycardia listed would have its own code This makes nomenclatures unwieldy for compiling health statistics Types of coding systems specific to health care include Diagnostic codes Are used to determine diseases disorders and symptoms Can be used to measure morbidity and mortality Examples ICD 9 CM ICD 10 ICD 11 1 Procedural codes They are numbers or alphanumeric codes used to identify specific health interventions taken by medical professionals Examples CPT HCPCS ICPM ICHI Pharmaceutical codes Are used to identify medications Examples ATC NDC ICD 11 Topographical codes Are codes that indicate a specific location in the body Examples ICD O SNOMED ICD 11WHO Family of International Classifications EditThe World Health Organization WHO maintains several internationally endorsed classifications designed to facilitate the comparison of health related data within and across populations and over time as well as the compilation of nationally consistent data 2 This Family of International Classifications FIC include three main or reference classifications on basic parameters of health prepared by the organization and approved by the World Health Assembly for international use as well as a number of derived and related classifications providing additional details Some of these international standards have been revised and adapted by various countries for national use Reference classifications Edit International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems ICD 3 ICD 10 10th revision in use by WHO since 1994 1 ICD 11 11th revision 4 5 International Classification of Functioning Disability and Health ICF International Classification of Health Interventions ICHI Derived classifications Edit Derived classifications are based on the WHO reference classifications i e ICD and ICF 2 They include the following International Classification of Diseases for Oncology Third Edition ICD O 3 The ICD 10 Classification of Mental and Behavioural Disorders This publication deals exclusively with Chapter V of ICD 10 6 and is available as two variants Clinical descriptions and diagnostic guidelines 7 also known as the blue book 6 Diagnostic criteria for research 8 also known as the green book 6 Application of the International Classification of Diseases to Dentistry and Stomatology 3rd Edition ICD DA 9 Application of the International Classification of Diseases to Neurology ICD 10 NA 10 EUROCAT is an extension of the ICD 10 Chapter XVII which covers congenital disorders National versions Edit See also ICD 10 National adoptions Several countries have developed their own version of WHO FIC publications which go beyond a local language translation Many of these are based on the ICD ICD 9 CM was the US adaptation of ICD 9 and was maintained for use until September 2015 Starting on October 1 2015 the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services CMMS granted physicians a one year grace period to begin using ICD 10 CM or they would be denied Medicare Part B claims 11 ICD 10 CM was developed by the US Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services CMS and the National Center for Health Statistics NCHS and has been in use in the US since October 2015 replacing ICD 9 CM 1 ICD 10 AM was published by Australia s National Centre for Classification in Health in 1998 and has since been adopted by a number of other countries 12 Related classifications Edit Related classifications in the WHO FIC are those that partially refer to the reference classifications e g only at specific levels 2 They include International Classification of Primary Care ICPC 13 ICPC 2 PLUS Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical Classification System with Defined Daily Doses ATC DDD Assistive products Classification and terminology ISO 9999 2022 WHO adopted ISO 9999 as a related classification in 2003 14 however the International Organization for Standardization ISO remains responsible for maintaining ISO 9999 International Classification for Nursing Practice ICNP 15 Historic FIC classifications Edit ICD versions before ICD 9 are not in use anywhere 16 ICD 9 was published in 1977 and superseded by ICD 10 in 1994 The last version of ICD 10 was published in 2019 and it was replaced by ICD 11 on 1 January 2022 17 As of February 2022 update 35 of the 194 member states have made the transition to the latest version of the ICD 18 The International Classification of Procedures in Medicine ICPM is a procedural classification that has not updated since 1989 and will be replaced by ICHI 19 National adaptions of the ICPM includes OPS 301 which is the official German procedural classification 20 International Classification of External Causes of Injury ICECI was last updated in 2003 and with the development ICD 11 is no longer maintained 21 The concepts of ICECI are represented within ICD 11 as extension codes Other medical classifications EditDiagnosis Edit Main article Diagnosis code Diagnostic coding systems The categories in a diagnosis classification classify diseases disorders symptoms and medical signs In addition to the ICD and its national variants they include Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders DSM DSM IV Codes DSM 5 International Classification of Headache Disorders 2nd Edition ICHD II 22 International Classification of Sleep Disorders ICSD Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man database of genetic codes Orchard Sports Injury and Illness Classification System OSIICS Read codes SNOMED CTProcedure Edit The categories in a procedure classification classify specific health interventions undertaken by health professionals In addition to the ICHI and ICPC they include Australian Classification of Health Interventions ACHI Canadian Classification of Health Interventions CCI 23 Current Procedural Terminology CPT Health Care Procedure Coding System HCPCS ICD 10 Procedure Coding System ICD 10 PCS OPCS Classification of Interventions and Procedures OPCS 4 Drugs Edit Drugs are often grouped into drug classes Such classifications include RxNorm Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical Classification System Medical Reference Terminology National Pharmaceutical Product IndexNational Drug File Reference Terminology NDF RT Edit National Drug File Reference Terminology was a terminology maintained by the Veterans Health Administration VHA It groups drug concepts into classes It was part of RxNorm until March 2018 Medication Reference Terminology MED RT Edit Medication Reference Terminology MED RT is a terminology created and maintained by Veterans Health Administration in the United States 24 In 2018 it replaced NDF RT that was used during 2005 2017 Med RT is not included in RxNorm but is included in National Library of Medicine s UMLS Metathesaurus Prior 2017 NDF RT was included in RxNorm The first release of MED RT was in the spring of 2018 25 The United States Food and Drug Administration requires in its Manual of Policies and Procedures MaPP 7400 13 dated July 18 2013 and updated on July 25 2018 that MED RT be used for selecting an established pharmacologic class EPC for the Highlights of Prescribing Information in drug labeling Each EPC text phrase is associated with a term known as an EPC concept EPC concepts use a standardized format derived from the U S Department of Veterans Affairs Veterans Health Administration VHA Medication Reference Terminology MED RT Each EPC concept also has a unique standardized alphanumeric identifier code used as the machine readable tag for the concept These codes enable SPL indexing The exact EPC text phrase used in INDICATIONS AND USAGE in Highlights might not be identical to the wording used to describe the EPC concept because the standardized language used for the EPC concept might not be considered sufficiently clear to the readers of the labeling Each active moiety also may be assigned MOA PE and CS standardized indexing concepts which are also linked to unique standardized alphanumeric identifier codes MOA PE and CS standardized indexing concepts may or may not be related to the therapeutic effect of the active moiety for a particular indication but they should still be scientifically valid and clinically meaningful Even if the MOA PE and CS standardized indexing concepts are not known with certainty to be related to the therapeutic effect they may still be useful for identifying drug interactions and permitting other safety assessments for a moiety based upon appropriate and relevant considerations such as enzyme inhibition and enzyme induction MOA PE and CS concepts are maintained in a standardized format as part of the MED RT hierarchy https www fda gov media 86437 downloadThe United States Food and Drug Administration Study Data Technical Conformance Guide dated July 2020 states 6 5 Pharmacologic Class 6 5 1 Medication Reference Terminology 6 5 1 1 General Considerations The Veterans Administration s Medication Reference Terminology MED RT should be used to identify the pharmacologic class es of all active investigational substances that are used in a study either clinical or nonclinical This information should be provided in the SDTM TS domain when a full TS is indicated The information should be provided as one or more records in TS where TSPARMCD PCLAS Pharmacologic class is a complex concept that is made up of one or more component concepts mechanism of action MOA physiologic effect PE and chemical structure CS 51 The established pharmacologic class is generally the MOA PE or CS term that is considered the most scientifically valid and clinically meaningful Sponsors should include in TS the full TS the established pharmacologic class of all active moieties of investigational products used in a study FDA maintains a list of established pharmacologic classes of approved moieties 52 If the established pharmacologic class is not available for an active moiety then the sponsor should discuss the appropriate MOA PE and CS terms with the review division For unapproved investigational active moieties where the pharmacologic class is unknown the PCLAS record may not be available https www fda gov media 136460 downloadThe United States Food and Drug Administration publishes a Data Standards Catalog that lists the data standards and terminologies that FDA supports for use in regulatory submissions to better enable the evaluation of safety effectiveness and quality of FDA regulated products In addition the FDA has the statutory and regulatory authority to require certain standards and terminologies and these are identified in the Catalog with the date the requirement begins and as needed the date the requirement ends and information sources The submission of data using standards or terminologies not listed in the Catalog should be discussed with the Agency in advance Where the Catalog expresses support for more than one standard or terminology for a specific use the sponsor or applicant may select one to use or can discuss as appropriate with their review division Version 7 0 of the FDA Data Standards Catalog dated 03 15 2021 specifies that MED RT was a required terminology by the White House Consolidated Health Informatics Initiative in various Federal Register Notices beginning as early as May 6 2004 for NDAs ANDAs and certain BLAs beginning on December 17 2016 and for certain IND s beginning on December 17 2017 https www fda gov media 85137 download Medical Devices Edit Global Medical Device Nomenclature GMDN the standard international naming system for medical devices 26 Other Edit Classification of Pharmaco Therapeutic Referrals CPR Logical Observation Identifiers Names and Codes LOINC standard for identifying medical laboratory observations MEDCIN point of care terminology intended for use in Electronic Health Record EHR systems Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities MedDRA Medical Subject Headings MeSH List of MeSH codes Nursing Interventions Classification NIC Nursing Outcomes Classification NOC TIME ITEM ontology of topics in medical education TNM Classification of Malignant Tumors Unified Medical Language System UMLS Victoria Ambulatory Coding System VACS Queensland Ambulatory Coding System QACS Australia citation needed Library classification that have medical components Edit Dewey Decimal Classification and Universal Decimal Classification section 610 620 National Library of Medicine classificationICD SNOMED and Electronic Health Record EHR EditSNOMED Edit The Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine SNOMED is the most widely recognised nomenclature in healthcare 27 Its current version SNOMED Clinical Terms SNOMED CT is intended to provide a set of concepts and relationships that offers a common reference point for comparison and aggregation of data about the health care process 28 SNOMED CT is often described as a reference terminology 29 SNOMED CT contains more than 311 000 active concepts with unique meanings and formal logic based definitions organised into hierarchies 28 SNOMED CT can be used by anyone with an Affiliate License 40 low income countries defined by the World Bank or qualifying research humanitarian and charitable projects 28 SNOMED CT is designed to be managed by computer and it is a complex relationship concepts 27 ICD Edit The International Classification of Disease ICD is the most widely recognized medical classification Maintained by the World Health Organization WHO 30 its primary purpose is to categorise diseases for morbidity and mortality reporting However the coded data is often used for other purposes too including reimbursement practices such as medical billing ICD has a hierarchical structure and coding in this context is the term applied when representations are assigned to the words they represent 30 Coding diagnoses and procedures is the assignment of codes from a code set that follows the rules of the underlying classification or other coding guidelines The current version of the ICD ICD 10 was endorsed by WHO in 1990 WHO Member states began using the ICD 10 classification system from 1994 for both morbidity and mortality reporting The exception was the US who only began using it for reporting mortality in 1999 whilst continuing to use ICD 9 CM for morbidity reporting The US only adopted its version of ICD 10 in October 2015 The delay meant it was unable to compare US morbidity data with the rest of the world during this period The next major version of the ICD ICD 11 was ratified by the 72nd World Health Assembly on 25 May 2019 and member countries have been able to report data using ICD 11 codes since 1 January 2022 17 ICD 11 is a fully digital product with integration of clinical terminology and classification It allows documentation at any level of detail It includes extension codes a terminology system with medicaments chemicals infections agents histopathology anatomy and mechanisms objects and animals and other elements that serve to describe sources of injury or harm Comparison Edit SNOMED CT and ICD were originally designed for different purposes and each should be used for the purposes for which they were designed 31 As a core terminology for the EHR SNOMED CT and ICD 11 provide a common language that enables a consistent way of capturing and sharing health data across specialities and sites of care SNOMED is a highly detailed terminology designed for input not reporting without a specific use case ICD 11 and SNOMED are clinically based and document whatever is needed for patient care In contrast to SNOMED ICD 11 allows full clinical documentation while permitting internationally agreed statistical aggregation for specific use cases The foundation of ICD 11 together with the WHO Classification of Health Interventions ICHI and the WHO Classification for Functioning Disability and Health ICF comprising also the WHO lists of anatomy substances and more are a complete ecosystem for lossless documentation in digital records and at the same time they address specific usecases for data aggregation in a multilingual freely usable way SNOMED CT and ICD are used directly by healthcare providers during the process of care 32 in addition ICD can be also used for coding after the episode of care in lower technology environments SNOMED CT has multiple hierarchy whereas there is single primary hierarchy for ICD 11 with alternative multiple hierarchies SNOMED CT concepts are defined logically by their attributes as is the case in ICD 11 that in addition has textual rules and definitions Data Mapping Edit SNOMED and ICD can be coordinated The National Library of Medicine NLM maps ICD 9 CM ICD 10 CM ICD 10 PCS and other classification systems to SNOMED 33 Data Mapping is the process of identifying relationships between two distinct data models 30 Veterinary medical coding EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2016 Veterinary medical codes include the VeNom Coding Group the U S Animal Hospital Codes and the Veterinary Extension to SNOMED CT VetSCT citation needed See also EditAcronyms in healthcare Ambulatory Payment Classification US billing system for outpatient services Biological database Classification of mental disorders Clinical coder German Institute for Medical Documentation and Information Health information management Health informatics Human resources for health information system List of international common standards Medical dictionary North American Nursing Diagnosis Association professional organization Nosology Pathology Messaging Implementation ProjectReferences Edit a b c ICD ICD 10 CM International Classification of Diseases Tenth Revision Clinical Modification Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2020 07 17 Retrieved 2020 11 04 a b c Family of International Classifications World Health Organization World Health Organization Archived from the original on October 3 2004 Retrieved 12 July 2011 International Classification of Diseases ICD World Health Organization World Health Organization WHO International Classification of Diseases 11th Revision ICD 11 WHO Retrieved 2022 06 02 ICD 11 tools a b c ICD 10 CM Release for 2014 now available Dx Revision Watch 2013 07 12 Retrieved 30 May 2015 The ICD 10 Classification of Mental and Behavioural Disorders Clinical descriptions and diagnostic guidelines PDF World Health Organization The ICD 10 Classification of Mental and Behavioural Disorders Diagnostic criteria for research PDF World Health Organization Bezroukov V February 1979 The application of the International Classification of Diseases to dentistry and stomatology Community Dent Oral Epidemiol 7 1 21 4 doi 10 1111 j 1600 0528 1979 tb01180 x PMID 282953 van Drimmelen Krabbe JJ Bradley WG Orgogozo JM Sartorius N November 1998 The application of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases to neurology ICD 10 NA J Neurol Sci 161 1 2 9 doi 10 1016 S0022 510X 98 00217 2 PMID 9879674 S2CID 12754467 Get ready for the end of ICD 10 flexibilities Modern Healthcare Retrieved 2016 10 16 Killewo Japhet Heggenhougen Kristian Quah Stella R 2010 Epidemiology and Demography in Public Health Academic Press ISBN 9780123822017 Retrieved 3 December 2018 ICPC 2 World Health Organization Assistive products for persons with disability Classification and terminology 30 November 2016 ISBN 9780539089127 Retrieved 2 June 2022 International Classification for Nursing Practice ICNP World Health Organization ICD ICD 9 International Classification of Diseases Ninth Revision Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2019 03 01 Retrieved 2020 11 04 a b WHO releases new International Classification of Diseases ICD 11 World Health Organization Retrieved 9 May 2020 ICD 11 2022 release World Health Organization Retrieved 2 June 2022 International Classification of Health Interventions ICHI World Health Organization World Health Organization Retrieved 8 September 2015 OPS German Procedure Classification Archived from the original on 13 October 2015 Retrieved 8 September 2015 ICECI World Health Organization Olesen Jes 2004 The International Classification of Headache Disorders 2nd edition Cephalalgia 24 Suppl 1 9 160 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2982 2003 00824 x PMID 14979299 S2CID 208214505 Canadian Classification of Health Interventions CCI National Drug File Reference Terminology NDF RT Documentation PDF U S Veterans Health Administration Introduction to MED RT as the Replacement for NDF RT PDF U S Veterans Health Administration IMDRF UDI Guidance Unique Device Identification UDI of Medical Devices 9 2 8 a b SNOMED International ihtsdo org Retrieved 17 January 2017 a b c FAQs Inclusion of SNOMED CT in the UMLS nih gov Retrieved 17 January 2017 Office Publications SNOMED CT Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine sydney edu au Retrieved 17 January 2017 a b c Margret K Amatayakul MBA RHIA CHPS CPHIT CPEHR amp FHIMSS 2009 Electronic Health Records A Practical Guide for Professionals and Organizations Chicago America AHIMA Why SNOMED cannot replace the ICD 10 CM PCS code sets icd10watch com Retrieved 17 January 2017 ICD 11 Implementation or Transition Guide PDF World Health Organization p 14 Retrieved 1 June 2022 Certain countries currently use automated coding WHO SNOMED CT to ICD 10 Cross Map Technology Preview Release who int Archived from the original on October 23 2012 Retrieved 17 January 2017 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Medical classification WHO Family of International Classifications official site Medical terminologies at the National Library of Medicine The International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation SNOMED CT Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Medical classification amp oldid 1178436056, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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