| Submitted By: Swapna Abhyankar
/ Regenstrief Institute, LOINC Document Ontology Subcommittee
|
| Data Element Information |
| Data Element Description |
Clinical documentation of an imaging study that includes the study that was performed, reason, findings, and impressions. |
| Use Case Description(s) |
| Use Case Description |
Imaging studies are performed and exchanged every day across healthcare systems, settings, and specialties. |
| Estimate the breadth of applicability of the use case(s) for this data element
|
These data elements are broadly used every day across healthcare systems, settings, and specialties and would be used by a large proportion of USCDI stakeholders. |
| Healthcare Aims |
- Improving patient experience of care (quality and/or satisfaction)
- Reducing the cost of care
- Improving provider experience of care
|
| Maturity of Use and Technical Specifications for Data Element |
| Applicable Standard(s) |
LOINC
We recommend including the following specific information:
“Type 2 LOINC codes that represent imaging procedures. A value set with these codes is available as a downloadable .csv file available from: https://loinc.org/oids/1.3.6.1.4.1.12009.10.2.5/, as well as a FHIR ValueSet: https://fhir.loinc.org/ValueSet/loinc-imaging-document-codes/”
https://loinc.org
|
| Additional Specifications |
There are HL7 C-CDA implementation guides related to imaging, as well as FHIR resources across versions, including the US Core, that are related to imaging. |
| Current Use |
Extensively used in production environments |
| Supporting Artifacts |
Imaging studies are performed and exchanged every day across healthcare systems, settings, and specialties. These data elements would be used by a large proportion of USCDI stakeholders.
|
| Extent of exchange
|
5 or more. This data element has been tested at scale between multiple different production environments to support the majority of anticipated stakeholders. |
| Supporting Artifacts |
Imaging studies are performed and exchanged every day across healthcare systems, settings, and specialties. These data elements would be used by a large proportion of USCDI stakeholders.
|
| Potential Challenges |
| Restrictions on Standardization (e.g. proprietary code) |
None |
| Restrictions on Use (e.g. licensing, user fees) |
None |
| Privacy and Security Concerns |
None |
| Estimate of Overall Burden |
Minimal – already being used |
Submitted by NCQA on
NCQA recommendation for Diagnostic Imaging Report
Recommendation: The current USCDI element includes both the structured and unstructured components of the report. We recommend adding RadLex and SNOMED CT as appropriate vocabulary standards representing the clinical findings from the structured components of an imaging report.
Rationale: The clinical conclusions or findings resulting from a diagnostic imaging study represent important information to be exchanged via standard terminology to support appropriate follow-up care and care coordination. NCQA continues to develop measures that require the findings from imaging reports, which routinely represent the clinical findings using the ACR Reporting and Data Systems (RADS) or SNOMED CT. Via quality measure testing with health systems and health plans, NCQA identified that while clinical findings are represented standardly, they are not always mapped to the available terminology codes. Adding SNOMED CT and RadLex vocabulary standards to the USCDI element will enhance standardization, reduce burden, and enhance interoperable exchange of these important data.