Literature DB >> 20429975

Views of diagnosis distribution in primary care in 2.5 million encounters in Stockholm: a comparison between ICD-10 and SNOMED CT.

Anna Vikström1, Mikael Nyström, Hans Ahlfeldt, Lars-Erik Strender, Gunnar H Nilsson.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Primary care (PC) in Sweden provides ambulatory and home health care outside hospitals. Within the County Council of Stockholm, coding of diagnoses in PC is mandatory and is done by general practitioners (GPs) using a Swedish primary care version of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases, version 10 (ICD-10). ICD-10 has a mono-hierarchical structure. SNOMED CT is poly-hierarchical and belongs to a new generation of terminology systems with attributes (characteristics) that connect concepts in SNOMED CT and build relationships. Mapping terminologies and classifications has been pointed out as a way to attain additional advantages in describing and documenting healthcare data. A poly-hierarchical system supports the representation and aggregation of healthcare data on the basis of specific medical aspects and various levels of clinical detail.
OBJECTIVE: To describe and compare diagnoses and health problems in KSH97-P/ICD-10 and SNOMED CT using primary care diagnostic data, and to explore and exemplify complementary aggregations of diagnoses and health problems generated from a mapping to SNOMED CT.
METHODS: We used diagnostic data collected throughout 2006 and coded in electronic patient records (EPRs), and a mapping from KSH97-P/ICD-10 to SNOMED CT, to aggregate the diagnostic data with SNOMED CT defining hierarchical relationship Is a and selected attribute relationships.
RESULTS: The chapter level comparison between ICD-10 and SNOMED CT showed minor differences except for infectious and digestive system disorders. The relationships chosen aggregated the diagnostic data to 2861 concepts, showing a multidimensional view on different medical and specific levels and also including clinically relevant characteristics through attribute relationships.
CONCLUSIONS: SNOMED CT provides a different view of diagnoses and health problems on a chapter level, and adds significant new views of the clinical data with aggregations generated from SNOMED CT Is a and attribute relationships. A broader use of SNOMED CT is therefore of importance when describing and developing primary care.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20429975     DOI: 10.14236/jhi.v18i1.750

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Inform Prim Care        ISSN: 1475-9985


  2 in total

1.  Enriching a primary health care version of ICD-10 using SNOMED CT mapping.

Authors:  Mikael Nyström; Anna Vikström; Gunnar H Nilsson; Hans Ahlfeldt; Håkan Orman
Journal:  J Biomed Semantics       Date:  2010-06-17

2.  Coding of procedures documented by general practitioners in Swedish primary care-an explorative study using two procedure coding systems.

Authors:  Anna Vikström; Maria Hägglund; Mikael Nyström; Lars-Erik Strender; Sabine Koch; Per Hjerpe; Ulf Lindblad; Gunnar H Nilsson
Journal:  BMC Fam Pract       Date:  2012-01-09       Impact factor: 2.497

  2 in total

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