Literature DB >> 14654890

Presenting XML-based medical discharge letters according to CDA.

H B Bludau1, A Wolff, A J Hochlehnert.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: The HL7 Clinical Document Architecture (CDA) is an important XML-based standard for the representation of clinical documents.
OBJECTIVES: The use of Markup Languages could satisfy the demands of involved healthcare staff as well as the needs of patients, to receive an overview of the patient's treatment during the hospital stay. The standardization efforts of different groups dealing with this problem have demonstrated progress, but have not, as yet, achieved a routinely usable result. In particular, differentiating information according to a hierarchical order has not been published to date.
METHODS: A retrospective analysis of 60 discharge letters from a cardiology ward (ward A) as well as 60 discharge letters from a gastroenterology ward (ward B) were extracted from the central hospital information system, by taking every fifth discharge letter issued over a one year period.
RESULTS: An XML-based prototype for medical discharge letters has been put in place representing the required information units and information elements. By means of an XSL-stylesheet, a detailed representation of the conventional discharge letter has been produced that is platform independent and permits the recurrent use of information units.
CONCLUSIONS: Through the introduction of definitions like information elements and information units, progress in the development of CDA level two and three might be realized. We present a method by which discharge letters can be used by an Internal Medicine Department. This concept is implemented in a XML-based prototype allowing a special view on XML data to generate this document type.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 14654890

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Methods Inf Med        ISSN: 0026-1270            Impact factor:   2.176


  4 in total

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2.  Automation of a problem list using natural language processing.

Authors:  Stephane Meystre; Peter J Haug
Journal:  BMC Med Inform Decis Mak       Date:  2005-08-31       Impact factor: 2.796

3.  The anaesthetic report: custom-made printouts from anaesthesia-information-management-systems using extensible stylesheet language transformation.

Authors:  Andreas Meyer-Bender; Richard Spitz; Bernhard Pollwein
Journal:  J Clin Monit Comput       Date:  2009-11-07       Impact factor: 2.502

4.  Integrating personalized medical test contents with XML and XSL-FO.

Authors:  Dennis Toddenroth; Martin Dugas; Thomas Frankewitsch
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2011-03-01       Impact factor: 2.463

  4 in total

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