Provider-authored request for the delivery of patient care services.

Data Element

Portable Medical Orders
Description

Orders for certain aspects of medical care, including end-of-life care, which support a transfer of care request from one practitioner or organization to another that provides end-of-life or life-sustaining care services. Different types of portable medical orders are used in different jurisdictions.

Comment

PACIO update re Level 1 Orders for End of Life Care Data Element

The PACIO Community (Post-Acute Care Interoperability) leadership wishes to update the ONC/USCDI with current efforts relating to the concept of Advance Directives and portable clinician authored orders in that domain. The PACIO Community continues to test FHIR interoperability of Advance Directive Information (ADI) during HL7 and CMS Connectathons (September 2021, May 2022, and July 2022) and resolve HL7 balloting comments in preparation for publication in upcoming months of a FHIR based Advance Directive Information Implementation Guide (IG) as Standard for Trial Use-1 (STU1).  As part of the work, PACIO completed an environmental scan across states and other jurisdictions to inform a design that could work on a national level while allowing for jurisdictional differences. PACIO’s focus has been on “model of meaning” of ADI concepts as opposed to “model of use” where only specific narrative or forms are used. A benefit of exchanging semantic meaning recognizes the current reality of diverse state and local jurisdictional processes present as the nation moves towards standards-based data exchange. The PACIO ADI Community has been working with external national organizations on the concept of practitioner authored information and orders that includes all types of advance directive concepts, including during emergency situations, end of life situations, and whenever an individual is unable to express for themselves their wishes and desires. The PACIO Community is working with external stakeholders both within the interoperability and clinical ecosystems to tease out how the concepts of clinician/practitioner authored orders (including portable non-location-based orders) in the domain of “Advance Directive” would differ from other “Types of orders for medical care/services” as currently in USCDI level 2 and/or “Orders for End-of-Life Care” in USCDI Level 1.

CDC-CMS Joint Priority Data Element

 Both CDC and CMS support inclusion of this element in v3. More details are provided in the joint letter sent to ONC. 

CMS-CCSQ Support for Orders for End-of-Life Care

CMS-CCSQ continues to advocate for orders for end-of-life care (comfort care, palliative care, hospice) to be reclassified to Level 2.

Orders for end-of-life care (comfort care, palliative care, hospice) include information that has the power to actionably communicate an individual’s wishes at their end of life. This data needs to be interoperable and shareable to reduce discordance between care provided and patient wishes and enhance value of care at end of life. This element represents a priority data concept that is not yet represented in USCDI and must be prioritized.

Maturity:

  • Current standards:
    • Orders can be exchanged in mature FHIR standards, including Service Request profile in the QI Core IG
    • End-of-Life Care concepts are captured in mature terminology: LOINC, SNOMED
  • Current uses, exchange, and use cases: Orders (service requests) for end-of-life care services are routinely captured in EHR systems used by hospitals and providers and are used in CMS quality reporting eCQMs across programs including IQR, QPP, and Promoting Interoperability programs. CMS requires the submission of order (service request) related data for quality measurement for eligible hospitals/CAHs and clinicians using ONC Certified Health Electronic Record Technology (CEHRT)—this includes orders (service requests) for an intervention (i.e., palliative care, hospice, comfort care).

CMS-CCSQ: request for additional information from ONC

CMS-CCSQ requests additional information and rational from ONC regarding the decision to classify Orders for end-of-life care as Level 1.

Orders for end-of-life care (comfort care, palliative care, hospice) include information that has the power to actionably communicate an individual’s wishes at their end of life. This data needs to be interoperable and shareable to reduce discordance between care provided and patient wishes and enhance value of care at end of life. This element represents a priority data concept that is not yet represented in USCDI and must be prioritized.

Log in or register to post comments