| Literature DB >> 29564850 |
Steven R Lane1, Holly Miller2, Elizabeth Ames3, Lawrence Garber4, David C Kibbe5, Joseph H Schneider6, Christoph U Lehmann7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Secure clinical messaging and document exchange utilizing the Direct Protocol (Direct interoperability) has been widely implemented in health information technology (HIT) applications including electronic health records (EHRs) and by health care providers and organizations in the United States. While Direct interoperability has allowed clinicians and institutions to satisfy regulatory requirements and has facilitated communication and electronic data exchange as patients transition across care environments, feature and function enhancements to HIT implementations of the Direct Protocol are required to optimize the use of this technology.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29564850 PMCID: PMC5863061 DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1637007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Clin Inform ISSN: 1869-0327 Impact factor: 2.342
Recommendations for transitions of care
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| Outbound message functions | |||
| TO1: | Direct interoperability messages are sent in “real time” and are never “batched” for timed sends | The sending of messages in real time, following a patient's transition of care, supports end users' ability to utilize information for patient care immediately. Clinicians, who have successfully used Direct, report that receiving the Direct message in “real-time” as opposed to batch processes allows the receiver to initiate appropriate patient outreach and follow up immediately preventing patient adverse events. It also allows patient care and transitional care management to be provided more efficiently | 1 |
| TO2: | HIT systems can automatically send Direct messages based on specific triggers (e.g., discharge or referral orders) | Automated real-time sending of Direct messages ensures that the patient's treating clinicians are aware of care transitions and are provided with the most current and up to date information. Timely receipt of messages facilitates information reconciliation in the recipient systems, helps to prevent unnecessary duplicate testing, and reduces adverse events. For example, an acute care system can be configured so that when a patient discharge order is entered this triggers the automated sending of a Consolidated Clinical Document Architecture (C-CDA) document, or a template of combined C-CDA document sections to the patient's Primary Care Provider (PCP) and/or ambulatory provider of record in the system, if a Direct address is available for that clinician. The ambulatory systems can be configured to send a Direct Message to a specialist triggered by a PCP's referral order. Similarly, consultants' EHR systems can be configured to send a Direct Message to the referring provider prompted by a referred patient being seen and/or the completion of the consultation note | 1 |
| TO3: | Once a triggering event occurs, the sending system is able to automatically send a message to: | This recommendation ensures continuity of care with the identified members of the patient's care team and prevents the blocking of information flow to the patient's providers across organizational boundaries | 1 |
| TO4: | The sending facility is able to configure a Direct “template” (see also TO7) that includes automatically attached document types and/or sections from the sending HIT system based on the specific clinical scenario. Attachments can include structured data (e.g., C-CDA, or a template with a combination of C-CDA document types or sections, spreadsheets); unstructured data (e.g., Word, PDF, or plain text files) and image files (e.g., JPG and GIF). In addition, providers can attach documents “on the fly” as needed | Direct has been demonstrated to provide a critical capability for information sharing in support of patient care, which essentially virtualizes the EHR across disparate HIT systems and health care organizations to support care team access to critical patient information. Direct messages should support the inclusion of all clinically relevant document types in support of best practice and efficient care as patients transition across their medical neighborhoods. The inclusion of a variety of document types also prevents duplicate testing or gaps in clinical information required for patient care | 1 |
| TO5: | Vendors use all existing recognized standard vocabularies to promote information sharing across all HIT systems and the ability of the recipient system to readily consume and reconcile discrete information | Direct interoperability supports the sharing of patient data using standardized data vocabularies across all EHR vendors. Standardized use and transmission of discrete data would allow for exceptional end user functionality creating care and documentation efficiencies and preventing life-threatening transcription errors. These efficiencies would further promote the desirability and use of Direct messaging and facilitate medical information reconciliation across the patient's care team. Exchange of discrete data via Direct, with appropriate pre- and posttransition of care clinician data reconciliation, can save clinicians documentation time and prevent potentially life-threatening transcription errors and patient adverse events | 1 |
| TO6: | Automatic outgoing messages' metadata include the “trigger” for sending the automated message (e.g., hospital discharge or specialty referral) | Including information regarding the message trigger in the metadata sent with a Direct message allows the recipient systems to automatically or manually route and/or prioritize messages for specific organizational role-based workflows | 2 |
| TO7: | Sending organization are able to configure templates for specific clinical circumstances such as discharge, referral, specific conditions/diagnoses, or encounter types. Templates are configurable at the provider or organization level | Template customization allows the organization to preconfigure Direct messages to include the appropriate information for the next provider caring for the patient. As a result, messages will include the right information and the right amount of information and will save the sending clinician time by avoiding the need to collate information manually for every outgoing Direct message. Having the right amount and most current patient information may also cause the recipient to attribute greater value to incoming messages preventing information overload and inaccuracies resulting from outdated information | 2 |
| TO8: | The system can issue an alert if the sending of an automated message fails. For example, a discharge order may trigger an automated discharge message, but the sending of the message fails because the system lacks a PCP of record or the PCP of record does not have a Direct address. In this case, the system will alert the provider, or his or her delegate, whose action (e.g., discharge order) precipitated the trigger event | This system alert will ensure that the failure of a Direct message to leave the initiating system will result in an alert to the clinician, or his or her designee, who can then initiate an alternative information sharing process (e.g., fax, postal mail, telephone call, etc.) As health care providers and organizations implement new automated electronic messaging systems, older communications processes may be left in place leading to redundant communication via multiple channels with resultant information overload and decreased attention to information received. The ability to know when an automated Direct message cannot be sent supports the decommissioning of alternate automated messaging, such as faxing/mailing result reports or discharge summaries, allowing these methodologies to be used only in circumstances where a Direct message cannot be sent | 2 |
| TO9: | Vendors will use recognized standardized vocabularies to exchange discrete data beyond PAMI data types (e.g., LOINC codes for laboratory results and CPT codes for procedures) to allow information sharing, consumption, and reconciliation across HIT systems | This recommendation promotes the exchange and recipient system consumption of discrete patient data in support of data reconciliation, care efficiency, population health management, and reduces medical errors and duplicate testing | 2 |
| TO10: | According to the health care organization's protocols and policies and the patient's wishes, the system may automatically send relevant Direct messages to the patient if the patient has a Direct address | This recommendation allows patients to receive their health information without the need to visit multiple health care organization linked portals | 3 |
| TO11: | We recommend that specialty-specific medical societies create and share with the health care community diagnosis and condition-specific templates that include the clinical information and data elements such as tests and study results to be sent when a patient is being referred to a specialist, or health care facility with that specific diagnosis or condition | Diagnosis/condition-specific templates specified and supported by medical societies will assure that specialists receive the appropriate information from referring providers in a standardized fashion and will prevent information overload by recipient clinicians, improving the efficiency of care transitions and coordination | 3 |
| Inbound message functions | |||
| TI1: | In addition to the C-CDA, or a template of combined C-CDA documents and/or document sections, HIT systems support receipt, storage, and display of a wide variety of attachment types including: | Medical information exists in a variety of formats (e.g., structured data, unstructured data, images, and PDF files). To support efficient care, avoid duplication of tests and procedures, and reduce information gaps, Direct messages should allow the inclusion of all clinically relevant document types to support the transition of patients across their medical neighborhoods. This recommendation discourages vendors from removing valuable information by stripping attachments from messages | 1 |
| TI2: | All HIT systems automatically match incoming Direct messages with existing patients in the recipient system. Without a unique patient identifier, systems use their existing patient matching algorithms. For new patients or patients, who cannot be automatically matched (e.g., new referral to a specialist, or patient demographic information that could match to more than one existing patient record); the receiving system will route the message to a work queue for patient registration and/or manual matching. Incoming data for matched patients will be stored and available to the designated recipient and his or her delegate(s) | Lack of an automated patient identification/matching service degrades Direct interoperability to the level of an EHR integrated fax server. Manual patient matching delays Direct messages from reaching the appropriate user, putting patients at increased risk for adverse events in the context of care transitions | 1 |
| TI3: | The system supports the reconciliation of active medications Following any patient care transition, the C-CDA or a template with a combination of C-CDA document types or sections includes a list of active medications: | Pre- and post-transition of care medication reconciliation using discrete data received via Direct can ensure that recipient clinicians have the most accurate and current information available for information reconciliation and system data consumption thereby enhancing care efficiency, saving clinicians' time, resulting in reduced errors, saved patient lives, and decreased costs | 1 |
| TI4: | The system supports the reconciliation of active problems | Reconciliation of patient problem lists pre- and post-transitions of care using discrete data exchanged via Direct can improve care efficiency and save clinicians time resulting in reduced errors and decreased costs | 1 |
| TI5: | The system supports the reconciliation of patient allergies | Reconciliation of patient allergies pre- and post-transition of care using discrete data exchanged via Direct can improve care efficiency and save clinicians time resulting in reduced errors and decreased costs | 1 |
| TI6: | The system supports the reconciliation of patient immunization histories | Reconciliation of patient immunization histories pre- and post-transition of care using discrete data exchanged via Direct can improve care efficiency and save clinicians time resulting in reduced errors and decreased costs | 1 |
| TI7: | The system supports the reconciliation of patient procedure histories | Reconciliation of patient procedure and surgical histories pre- and post-transition of care using discrete data exchanged via Direct can improve care efficiency and save clinicians time resulting in reduced errors and decreased costs | 2 |
| TI8: | Following any patient care transition, the provided C-CDA, or a template with a combination of C-CDA document types and sections, includes an encoded list of tests or studies performed and their results (e.g., utilizing LOINC codes for laboratory test result components and SNOMED codes for other result values): | Receipt and incorporation of historical laboratory and other test results using discrete data exchanged via Direct can reduce duplicative testing, improve patient safety and care efficiency and save clinicians' time resulting in reduced errors, decreased costs, and improved clinical outcomes. | 2 |
| TI9: | As standardized vocabulary use increases in HIT systems, additional standardized data elements will be included in Direct messages and enabled for reconciliation across systems. Data may include social, family, and medical histories, genomic data, patient-generated health data, patient satisfaction, social determinates of health, medical device data, patient care team members, etc. | Direct exchange and reconciliation of additional data types using discrete data can reduce duplicative testing, improve patient safety and care efficiency, and save clinicians' time resulting in reduced errors, decreased costs, and improved clinical outcomes | 3 |
| TI10: | Recipient systems are able to configure the display of information received with an incoming message Configuration may be specified at the organization or user level | Allowing users to determine which information is most relevant information and to configure his/her view of the received information facilitates efficient review of critical information for patient care and enhances the adoption of this technology. The ability for the recipient user to drill down to other information, if needed, allows the recipient user to access all information if the preconfigured view does not include information the user requires in a specific instance of care | 3 |
| TI11: | For existing patients, the recipient system will identify all discrete information in the received document that is new or changed compared with the existing discrete information in the receiving system | Identifying new or modified data automatically, enables clinicians to focus their attention on relevant new and revised data resulting in more efficient patient care following a patient's care transition. This also facilitates ease of data reconciliation and prevention of duplicate testing and adverse patient events, thereby reducing health care costs | 3 |
Abbreviations: CPT, Current Procedural Terminology; EHR, electronic health records; HIT, health information technology; ICD10, International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision; LOINC, Logical Observation Identifiers Names and Codes; PAMI data, problems, allergies, medications, and immunizations data; SNOMED, Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine.
Recommendations for clinical messaging
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| Outbound message functions | |||
| CO1: | Sending user may create a patient-specific Direct message to send to a Direct recipient | Composing messages supports standard and familiar email-like functionality, allows patient-specific information to be securely transferred from one HIT system to another to support patient-specific care coordination | 1 |
| CO2: | Sending user may select a new recipient by selecting the recipient's name from a prepopulated list or by entering his/her Direct address in the recipient field | This facilitates the end user's ability to send a Direct message to a Direct recipient of their choosing, whether or not the system is preconfigured with the recipient's Direct address | 1 |
| CO3: | Sending user may add one or more patient-specific attachments, to the outgoing patient-specific message. Attachments will consistently be delivered with the message | The ability to add attachments allows robust communication in support of patient care since it enables users to attach a variety of document types including scanned paper-based documents and clinical images | 1 |
| CO4: | Recipient user can forward received messages and/or any associated attachments to one or more other recipients within their organization as needed to support clinical care | Forwarding messages supports team-based patient care by allowing appropriate sharing of information | 1 |
| CO5: | Recipient user can reply to the sender of a Direct message, maintaining continuity between the original received message and the reply | Reply functionality enables efficient Direct communication and maintains the continuity of message strings | 1 |
| CO6: | Sending and recipient users can identify the message Context. Context is established based on a standard list of Context types. All automated Direct message templates (see TO7) may have a preconfigured Context as part of the template specification. Context may be determined from ADT fields, the document type, or other sources | A message Context that is visible and identifiable to the recipient helps to expedite patient care. It also allows messages of specific Context types to be routed to the appropriate user within the recipient's system | 1 |
| CO7: | Sending user can enter a message Subject as free text or selected from a predetermined list of commonly used Subjects. The Subject specified by the sending user is displayed to the receiving user(s) | This recommendation implements a standard and familiar email function and supports efficient and/or automated sorting, routing, and management of messages based on the Subject | 2 |
| CO8: | Users can configure and maintain a list of their personal “favorite” or frequently used Direct recipients | A favorites list facilitates the end user's ability to efficiently send a Direct message to a Direct recipient by selecting the recipient from the sender's favorites list | 2 |
| CO9: | Users can send messages to multiple recipients simultaneously utilizing standard fields of “To” and “CC” (carbon copy). There should be no “BCC” (blind carbon copy) functionality | The ability to send a message simultaneously to multiple recipients supports the inclusion of additional relevant members of the care team into the TOC process. BCC functionality is not appropriate for clinical messaging which may become a part of a patient's permanent legal medical record | 2 |
| CO10: | Users can create, maintain, and utilize patient-specific message recipient distribution lists and have the ability to easily select some or all members of a patient's lit to receive a message | Patient-specific distribution lists allow for the maintenance of a list of a patient's care team members. Such lists support the efficient routing of a single message to more than one member of the patient's care team | 2 |
| CO11: | Sending user can compose and send a message on behalf of another individual with proper authorization and attribution | This recommendation improves efficiency of communication for clinicians working within a care team | 2 |
| CO12: | Sending user is notified if the message cannot be delivered to the intended recipient or their designee. The system can be configured to notify the sending user of both successful and failed delivery if the end user so desires. The failure notification message includes a reason for failure if known | The sending user must have confidence that a sent message was delivered to the intended recipient or their designee Unless users can confidently know that a message was delivered, or was undeliverable, transition from existing messaging functionalities, such as fax and postal mail, to Direct will be delayed A failed delivery notification may be used by the sending organization as a trigger to initiate an investigation or troubleshooting or to reconfigure their system or workflows to facilitate future communications | 2 |
| CO13: | Sending user can optionally indicate the Priority or level of importance of the message. (i.e., urgent, standard, nonurgent). The specified Priority will be displayed to the recipient. Organizations can configure that messages without a Priority indication are sent as “standard” | The sending user will be able to indicate message urgency to recipient allowing the recipient to prioritize which messages to attend to in what order. The level of importance can also be used to trigger additional functionality such as sorting or routing of messages | 2 |
| CO14: | Recipient user can reply to the sender of a Direct message and to one or more additional recipients of the original message | This replicates standard email functionality and facilitates inclusion of team members on a response to a received message. This functionality is particularly valuable when a patient is cared for by team members at multiple organizations | 2 |
| CO15: | Sending user can be notified once a sent message has been opened by the intended recipient or their designee. The sending system can be configured to turn on/off read receipt at the organization or individual level. System configuration can set up the appropriate individual(s) or message pool(s) to receive read-receipt messages and the timeframe to receive an “unopened message” notification. The sending organization can also configure specific messages types that require read-receipt notification and/or allow the sender to activate the read-receipt feature on the fly when sending a message. The read-receipt message will also include the name and role of the individual in the recipient organization, who opened the message | Read-receipt functionality ensures that the sender, or his/her designee, is informed that a sent message has failed to reach a recipient, or if someone in the recipient organization has actually opened the message in the period defined by the sender. This feature assures timely follow-up and reduces the risk for clinical communications and/or tasks to remain incomplete | 3 |
| CO16: | Sending user can configure his/her message receipt notification to “yes” or “no” manually or automatically based on the Priority of the outgoing message, and can configure the timeframe for the notification. For example, urgent messages can be configured to always trigger a failed message receipt within 8 hours of sending | Sending user will be aware of important message send failures alerting them of the need to use alternative methods of communication, particularly in the event of urgent message send failures | 3 |
| CO17: | Sending user is able to include in a message a URL/pointer to an image file (e.g., a scanned document or diagnostic image) maintained by the sending organization which allows a message recipient to navigate to the stored image and view and download it | Diagnostic images and other large documents may not need to be sent as message attachments in every case. Sending a pointer to the image/document allows the recipient the option of viewing or downloading the document | 3 |
| CO18: | Sending user is able to: | This recommendation prevents the distribution of patient information that would be in violation of existing law or otherwise inappropriate | 3 |
| CO19: | Recipient user can forward a received message and/or any associated attachments to one or more recipients at a different organization or using a different HIT system. Forwarding of specially protected information is prevented or limited (see CO18) | Forwarding of messages supports team-based care by sharing information when care team members are in different organizations | 3 |
| Inbound message functions | |||
| CI1: | All EHRs, Health Information Service Providers (HISPs), and other HIT applications receiving Direct messages automatically match incoming messages to the correct patient for those already known within the recipient system. Only in the event that the patient is new or cannot be automatically matched (e.g., a new referral to a specialist, or patient demographics that might match more than one existing patient record), the receiving system places the message in a work queue for manual matching or patient registration | Patient matching must be automated to prevent impeding data flow to intended recipient(s) and potentially creating an unsafe situation for the affected patient. With broad adoption of Direct, timely care transitions and coordination require automatic matching. Manual patient matching places an unsupportable burden on staff | 1 |
| CI2: | The receiving systems must allow the recipient to open and view a wide variety of content types received as message attachments including structured data (C-CDA, or a template with a combination of C-CDA sections, document types, Excel spreadsheets, etc.); unstructured data (Word, PDF, plain text files, etc.) and images (JPG, GIF files, DICOM, etc.). Patient-context information contained in the message attachment should be visible or accessible to the clinical user | Receiving systems must not strip attachments from the message and must be able to consume all supported attachment types. Included attachments were deemed necessary for the optimal care of the patient by the sender and thus must be consumable. This recommendation will increase the confidence that a sent attachment will be viewable by the intended recipient | 1 |
| CI3: | All clinically relevant message components and attachments (e.g., sender, intended recipient, CCed recipients, message subject, message body text, message context, and attachments) display reliably in a consistent manner to the receiving end user in a personal in box. The content of standard documents (e.g., a document that conforms to the C-CDA standard, or a template with a combination of C-CDA sections and/or document types) are displayed to the user in a consistent format so that the user can become familiar with the location of information in the document | The inbox as an access point for all data relating to the patient creates efficiency and improves the chance that all the information will be reviewed. Consistent display will familiarize the user with the format and allows for review that is more efficient | 1 |
| CI4: | Standardized data vocabularies are included in a uniform fashion to support transmission of discrete data. Minimum requirements are problems, allergies, medications, immunizations (PAMI), and procedures | Standardized vocabulary creates care and documentation efficiencies and data integration capabilities prevent transmission, interpretation, and data entry errors | 1 |
| CI5: | The recipient can view the message Priority indicated by the sender and can prioritize his/her workflow based on this information | As clinicians frequently experience work force shortages and information overload, this feature allows the recipient to prioritize his/her incoming messages | 2 |
| CI6: | The recipient user, or his/her delegate, is able to sort the list of received messages by common characteristics, including date/time of receipt, patient, sending user, recipient user, context, priority, or subject | This standard email functionality allows recipients to manage messages efficiently | 2 |
| CI7 | Receiving systems provides the ability to configure, either at the organization or individual level, real-time notifications to recipients regarding the receipt of a Direct message (e.g., to a specified email or text messaging account). These notifications do not include PHI | This functionality protects users from the need to constantly check their application for new messages | 2 |
| CI8 | Receiving systems support configurable routing of messages based on Context metadata (e.g., discharge, referral, care coordination, etc.) received with the message. This routing includes the following functionalities: | Auto-routing of messages based on message Context increases efficiency of care coordination, supports team-based care, and decreases clutter in the provider's inbox, and increases usability and adoption of Direct messaging | 2 |
| CI9: | The recipient of a Direct message is able to forward the message and any attachments to another user in of the same system in the same organization regardless of whether the intended recipient is provisioned with a Direct address | Clinicians receiving clinical Direct messages may need to forward these messages to others in their organization for processing even though these users may not be enabled with the ability to send or receive external messages directly | 2 |
Abbreviations: ADT fields, Admission, Discharge, Transfer fields; C-CDA, Consolidated Clinical Document Architecture; HIPAA, Health Information Portability and Accountability Act; HIT, health information technology; PHI, protected health information.
Recommendations for administrative functions
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| A1: | All clinical Users have full individual Direct messaging capability regardless of whether they have a National Provider Identifier (NPI), e.g., care managers, nurses, etc. may have their own Direct account | A provider directory service may require including the NPI when publishing the user's Direct address. While intended to provide clarity between similarly named providers, many health care providers do not have NPIs and would therefore be excluded from the directory. Utilization of secure clinical messaging for care managers, care coordinators, social workers, therapists, etc. is foundational for team-based care of patients | 1 |
| A2: | Organizations have the capability to create departmental and location-based Direct accounts to send and receive messages (e.g., messages intended for health information management, admitting, the emergency department (ED), or other specific clinical departments) in addition to accounts for ndividual clinicians | Utilization of secure messaging promotes patient care by involving clinicians and other health care workers individually and based on departmental functions. For example, a referral message could be routed to the referral staff, or a message regarding skilled nursing placement to a case manager | 1 |
| A3: | Users have the ability to enter the Direct address of an intended recipient manually in addition to selecting a recipient from a directory. This functionality should be provided only in conjunction with the requirement for a Failed Message Delivery/Receipt Notification given the risk of errors with manual data entry | There are situations where users may need to send a Direct message to a recipient, whose address is not available in their HIT system's directory. As patients and additional members of their care team are provisioned with Direct addresses, this recommendation becomes increasingly important. Processes must exist to assure that nonfunctional or erroneous addresses are validated or otherwise trigger an alert to the sending user or surrogate so that alternate means of communication can be utilized | 2 |
| A4: | A standard automated methodology exists to allow a Direct user to request a standard C-CDA document and/or a template with a combination of C-CDA document types or sections from another Direct user. The system allows the sender/requestor to specify the specific document(s) requested (e.g., a patient summary/Continuity of Care Document [CCD], discharge summary, or encounter summary), the modality to send the response (e.g., Direct message vs. fax), and where the document(s) should be sent (e.g., to a Direct address or fax number) | While Direct is utilized primarily to push messages, it can also be used to mimic some of the functionality of query-based, or “pull,” document exchange. Users can send a message that requests a recipient system to automatically send patient information to the requestor. For a patient in the ED, for example, the local HIT system could manually or automatically query the EHR of the patient's primary care physician or other treating provider for information and receive an automated response with a patient summary CCD to facilitate safer, timelier, more efficient, and cost-effective care | 2 |
| A5: | User can send a Direct message to request specific information from the recipient using a configurable multiselect pick list to indicate the information requested | This recommendation facilitates receiving the specific information needed to most efficiently and effectively care for the patient. It can avoid the inclusion of unnecessary information, limiting the time and effort required to locate pertinent data | 3 |
| A6: | When a user sends a message and the recipient is unable to receive the message, it will be auto-forwarded to a designated user and/or pool | A sender may not know if the intended recipient of a message is out of the office, covered by another provider, having outside messages routinely routed to another user or pool, or has left the organization. Automated forwarding of the message to an assigned back-up recipient/provider, who will assume care of the patient, or to a pool that manages undeliverable messages will ensure that important patient-related messages are not lost | 3 |
| A7: | Sending user can add one or more attachments to an outgoing non-patient-specific message. Attachments will consistently be delivered with the message. | The ability to utilize Direct messaging to support the secure transmission of non-patient-specific messages and attachments supports communication which is required as a part of health care organizations' administrative functions including quality improvement, insurance preauthorization, and other billing and reporting functions | 3 |
Abbreviations: EHR, electronic health records; HIT, health information technology.
Categorization of recommended features/functions
| Feature/Function | Priority 1 | Priority 2 | Priority 3 | Total | |
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| Transitions of care | Outbound message functions | 5 | 4 | 2 | 11 |
| Inbound message functions | 6 | 2 | 3 | 11 | |
| Clinical messaging | Outbound message functions | 6 | 8 | 5 | 19 |
| Inbound message functions | 4 | 5 | 0 | 9 | |
| Administrative functions | 2 | 2 | 3 | 7 | |
| Total | 23 | 21 | 13 | 57 | |