Data Standards




Existing Standards

Standard   ANSI*   CHI   Area Addressed   Issues   Further Information
LOINC   N   Y   Laboratory Data   Privately owned and maintained by The Regenstrief Institute (www.regenstrief.org) and subject to Terms of Use   http://www.loinc.org/
IEEE 1073   Y   Y   Medical device communication with computers   ??   http://www.ieee.org/
HL-7   Y   Y   Clinical messaging   Private consortium   http://www.hl7.org/
DICOM   N   Y   Medical imaging / Radiology   Developed and owned by the National Electrical Manufacturers Association   http://medical.nema.org/
NCPDP   Y   Y   Pharmacy Services   ??   http://www.ncpdp.org/
SNOMED   N   N   Hierarchical systematized structured and coded vocabulary    Privately owned by the College of American Pathologists. Partial rights recently licensed for 5 years by HHS for $32M. The UK National Health Service is implementing SNOMED, which is managed though SNOMED International Authority, in which the NHS has a 20% voting representation.   http://www.snomed.org/
UMLS   N   N   Metathesaurus containing information about biomedical concepts and terms from many controlled vocabularies and classifications used in patient records, administrative health data, bibliographic and full-text databases and expert systems. SNOMED is now being incorporated.   Owned by the US National Library of Medicine.    http://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/umls/
X12N   N   N   Insurance EDI standard   ??     
NCVHS   -   N   Advisory group to HHS who reviews standard.        http://ncvhs.hhs.gov/
HIPAA   -   -   Secure transmission of data   HIPAA security standard.   http://aspe.hhs.gov/admnsimp/FINAL/FR03-8334.pdf

* Indicates the standard setting group is
ANSI accredited. For more information on ANSI see http://www.ansi.org/
† Indicates the standard has been accepted by HHS's CHI initiative.

Other entities interested in standards include: Consolidated Health Informatics initiative

see:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/egov/gtob/health_informatics.htm

The CHI Initiative seeks to adopt standards in 24 domains:
  1. Laboratory Result Names - adopted
  2. Messaging Standards: Includes scheduling, medical record/image management, patient administration, observation reporting, financial management, patient care - adopted
  3. Messaging Standards: Includes retail pharmacy transactions - adopted
  4. Messaging Standards: Connectivity - adopted
  5. Messaging Standards: Includes Image Information to Workstations - adopted
  6. Medications - recommendations in clearance
  7. Interventions/Procedures - recommendations under consideration
  8. Demographics - recommendations in clearance
  9. Immunizations - recommendations under consideration
  10. Lab Result Contents - recommendations in clearance
  11. Clinical Encounters - team deployed
  12. Diagnosis/Problem Lists - team deployed
  13. Test-Based Reports - team deployed
  14. History and Physical - team deployed
  15. Population Health - team deployed
  16. Anatomy/Physiology - recommendations under consideration
  17. Multimedia - team deployed
  18. Nursing - recommendations under consideration
  19. Genes and Proteins - team deployed
  20. Supplies (medical devices and other resources including staff) - recommendations under consideration
  21. Financial/Payment (Billing) - team deployed
  22. Chemical - team deployed
  23. Disability - team deployed
  24. Units - recommendations in clearance
CHI began by contracting with the Electronic Health Collaborative (EHC) -- lead by HL7 and the IOM. They drafted a series of "essential elements" for the EMR. These were vetted at a series of regional meetings, including one in Chicago attended by a number of Northwestern participants. Their final report is available at online

Institute of Medicine: Data Standards for Patient Safety

See:
http://www.iom.edu/project.asp?id=4629

The IOM book, Patient Safety: Achieving a New Standard of Care provides very specific and proscriptive recommendations concerning EMR features and their use. Some of their other publications are relevant.

Concerns

Standards that have been developed have not yet received official endorsement by important industry groups, particularly the US government. This is now being rectified. However, HHS has licensed existing systems and thereby created a de facto standard without securing long-term public domain status for these standards. This puts the industry at risk of profiteering by owners of the standards in future years. David A Stumpf, MD, PhD