1 / 19

IHE PCD MEM-DMC CMMS & RTLS Vendor Perspective

IHE PCD MEM-DMC CMMS & RTLS Vendor Perspective. Monroe Pattillo Practical Health Interoperability, LLC 6/13/2013. What We’re Attempting to Accomplish. Improve patient safety and healthcare operational efficiencies and effectiveness We accomplish this through the use of IHE PCD profiles

Download Presentation

IHE PCD MEM-DMC CMMS & RTLS Vendor Perspective

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. IHE PCD MEM-DMCCMMS & RTLSVendor Perspective Monroe Pattillo Practical Health Interoperability, LLC 6/13/2013

  2. What We’re Attempting to Accomplish • Improve patient safety and healthcare operational efficiencies and effectiveness • We accomplish this through the use of IHE PCD profiles • Standards based , documented use cases, transactions, with agreed common content • IHE PCD uses HL7 v2.6

  3. The General Need • Electronically record information (to EMR, CIS, CMMS)… • That would otherwise have to be entered manually • Record it so as to meet requirements (FDA, JC, etc.) • Communicate the information to systems that can use the information to… • Improve patient safety • Improve efficiencies and effectiveness of… • Devices, Systems • Staff (clinicians, biomeds, CEs, etc.) through notifications

  4. The Specific Need • Tracking Equipment Utilization • To improve cost effectiveness of that equipment • To improve equipment state awareness • To provide increased ROI on supplied systems • Tracking Equipment and People Locations • To improve cost effectiveness of equipment • To identify location of patient at the time of an alert • To identify location of staff at the time of an alert • To pass location events & information to staff • To associated staff to patients (longer term)

  5. The Specific Need • Alerting Those Responsible and Documenting the Alert • Improve equipment quality and availability while improving staff productivity • Provide clinical and technical staff the ability to respond to malfunctions that affect patient care • Documenting Conditions That Do Not Require Intervention • Improve productivity, e.g., “self-test passed” reduces the need for hands on examination • Hardware, software, patch versions

  6. Overview of IHE Process Steps • Document , ballot, and approve • Brief Proposal for Profile • Detailed Proposal for Profile • Trial Implementation for Profile using a Working Group • Verify it at IHE Pre-Connectathon & Connectathon • Demonstrate it at HIMSS Interoperability Showcase • Demonstrate it at AAMI IHE PCD Interoperability Demonstration • Produce an IHE Integration Statement • Produce a commercial implementation

  7. Some Use Cases • CMMS reports (generated reports, not msgs to wireless/mobile devices) • UC #1 Device utilization • by patient association • by events when patient associated • UC #2 Device issues management • battery not maintaining charge • malfunction • Staff notification of device alarms & events (not by CMMS) • UC #3 Notify clinicians of issues when device is associated with patient • Leads off, pump flow issues, bag empty • UC #4 Notify Biomeds of issues when device is not associated with patient • Battery not maintaining charge • Staff notifications of CMMS alerts & events (by CMMS use of ACM AM) • UC #5 Device management • cleaning, calibration, recalls, lease return • UC # 6 Device issue resolution • repair, S/W updates

  8. Medical Devices to CMMS for ReportingOverview (UC # 1 & 2) • Medical equipment sends messages to CMMS • Patient Association/De-association • Utilization by patient – Start, Pause, Stop/End • Equipment management events – Battery management, Self-Test Passed/Failed • Medical Devices - Infusion Pumps, Patient Monitoring • Patient Specific Information is ignored (HIPAA) • Equipment identification is significant • Equipment location is significant

  9. Medical Devices to CMMS for ReportingMessage Flow Alarm or Event HL7 v2 ORU^ R01, R40, R43 Report Medical Device CMMS HL7 v2 ACK Receipt Acknowledgement

  10. Medical Devices to CMMS for ReportingHL7 v2 Basic Message Content as seen by CMMS • MSH-3Sending Application – identifies sending application, MSH-4Sending Facility – identifies instance of application, MSH-5 – identifies CMMS as application, MSH-6 – identifies instance of CMMS • MSH-7 Timestamp – when message was sent (yyyymmddhhmmss±zzzz) • MSH-9 Message Type Identification – ORU^xxx^ORU_xxx (R01 Observation, R40 Alarm, R43 Event) • MSH-21 Message Profile Identifier – for alarms = “IHE_PCD_ACM_001^IHE PCD^1.3.6.1.4.1.19376.1.6.1.4.1^ISO” • PID Segment Patient Identification (ignored – HIPAA) – may be useful for traceability, i.e. which patients have been associated with defective, out of rev, or out of calibration equipment • PV1-3Patient Location – ADT Assigned Patient Location – Unit^Room^Bed, alternative in case RTLS not supported • OBR Event or Alarm Indication – OBR-3 Unique status update ID on event or alarm, OBR-4 Identifies the observation, OBR-29 Parent ID for multiple update notifications • OBX Segment, multiple occurrences – pertinent parameters relating to alarm or event • OBX-3 Observation Identifier, OBX-4 Sub-ID FACET, OBX-5 Observation value, OBX-6 Units of Measurement, OBX-7 Range, OBX-8 Flags (priority & class for alarms) • Source MDS/VMDS/Chan • OBX-14 Observation timestamp (yyyymmddhhmmss±zzzz) • OBX-18 Equipment identification (event or alarm source, not the application/gateway that sent it) • How will equipment location (RTLS) be passed – OBX-5 when OBX-4 Sub ID FACET = 6 per ACM TI 2012

  11. Medical Devices to CMMS for ReportingHL7 v2 Acknowledgement Basic Content as Sent by CMMS • MSH-3 Sending Application – identifies CMMS as sender, MSH-4Sending Facility – identifies instance of CMMS, MSH-5 Receiving Application, from original message, MSH-6 Receiving Facility, from original message • MSH-7 Timestamp – when acknowledgement was sent, MSH-8 Security = Empty • MSH-9 Message Type Identification – ACK^xxx^ACK(R01 Observation, R40 Alarm, R43 Event) • MSH-10 Message Control – message ID # • MSA-1 Acknowledgement Code – “AA”=Ok, “AR”=Retransmit, “AE”=Error • MSA-2 Message ID of message being acknowledged • MSA-4 Expected Sequence Number, for transport error retransmission • ERR Segment – used to indicate specifics of an error - ERR-2 Error Location, ERR-3 Error Code, ERR-4 Severity, ERR-5 Application Error Code

  12. Medical Devices as ACM AR to AM to AC for Staff NotificationsOverview (UC # 3 & 4) • Medical equipment sends messages as ACM AR to ACM AM to ACM AC for delivery to staff (clinician/biomed) • Device in need of assistance (door, syringe, paper out) • Workflow – dose end, bag empty, bag near empty, leads off • Equipment management events – Battery management • Medical Devices – Infusion Pumps, Patient Monitoring • Patient Specific Information is Ignored (HIPAA) • Equipment identification is significant • Equipment location is significant

  13. Medical Devices as ACM AR to AM to AC for Staff NotificationsMessage Flow Alarm or Event Disseminate Notification IHE PCD-04 HL7 v2 ORU^R40 IHE PCD-06 WCTP Medical Device as ACM AR ACM AM ACM AC IHE PCD-07 WCTP HL7 v2 ACK Implementation Specific Receipt Acknowledgement Status Updates (delivery, read) & Replies (accept, reject)

  14. Medical Devices as ACM AR to AM to AC for Staff NotificationsIHE PCD-04 (HL7 v2) Basic Message Content sent by AR • MSH-3 Sending Application – identifies sending application, MSH-4 Sending Facility – identifies instance of application, MSH-5 – identifies receiving ACM AM application, MSH-6 – identifies receiving ACM AM instance • MSH-7 Timestamp – when message was sent (yyyymmddhhmmss±zzzz) • MSH-9 Message Type Identification – ORU^R40^ORU_R40 (alarm or alert) • MSH-15 Accept Acknowledgement Type = “NE”, MSH-16 Application Acknowledgement Type = “AL” • MSH-21 Message Profile Identifier – for alarms = “IHE_PCD_ACM_001^IHE PCD^1.3.6.1.4.1.19376.1.6.1.4.1^ISO” • PID Segment Patient Identification (ignored – HIPAA) – may be useful for traceability, i.e. which patients have been associated with defective, out of rev, or out of calibration equipment • PV1-3 Patient Location – ADT Assigned Patient Location – Unit^Room^Bed, alternative in case RTLS not supported • OBR Event or Alarm Indication – OBR-3 Unique status update ID on event or alarm, OBR-4 = “ALARM^ALARM”, OBR-29 Parent ID for multiple update notifications • OBX Segment, multiple occurrences – pertinent parameters relating to alarm or event • OBX-3 Observation Identifier, OBX-4 Sub-ID FACET, OBX-5 Observation value, OBX-6 Units of Measurement, OBX-7 Range, OBX-8 Flags (priority & class for alarms) • Source MDS/VMDS/Chan • OBX-14 Observation timestamp (yyyymmddhhmmss±zzzz) • OBX-18 Equipment identification (event or alarm source, not the application/gateway that sent it) • How will equipment location (RTLS) be passed – OBX-5 when OBX-4 Sub ID FACET = 6 per ACM TI 2012

  15. CMMS as ACM AR to AM to AC for Staff NotificationsOverview (UC # 5 & 6) • CMMS sends messages as ACM AR to ACM AM to ACM AC for delivery to staff (clinician/biomed) • Device in need of forced maintenance – Outside utilization limit • Periodic workflow – Used and needs cleaning, Time for calibration • Equipment management – Replace battery, Needs S/W Update • Medical Devices – Infusion Pumps, Patient Monitoring • Equipment identification is significant • Equipment location is significant

  16. CMMS as ACM AR to AM to AC for Staff NotificationsMessage Flow Alarm or Event Disseminate Notification IHE PCD-04 HL7 v2 ORU^R40 IHE PCD-06 WCTP CMMS as ACM AR ACM AM ACM AC IHE PCD-07 WCTP HL7 v2 ACK Implementation Specific Receipt Acknowledgement Status Updates (delivery, read) & Replies (accept, reject)

  17. CMMS as ACM AR to AM to AC for Staff NotificationsIHE PCD-04 (HL7 v2) Basic Message Content sent by CMMS • MSH-3 Sending Application – identifies CMMS application, MSH-4 Sending Facility – identifies instance of CMMS, MSH-5 – identifies receiving application, MSH-6 – identifies receiving application instance • MSH-7 Timestamp – when message was sent (yyyymmddhhmmss±zzzz) • MSH-9 Message Type Identification – ORU^R40^ORU_R40 alarm or alert • MSH-10 Message Control – message ID #, MSH-11 Processing ID = “P”, MSH-12 HL7 Version ID = “2.6” • MSH-15 Accept Acknowledgement Type = “NE”, MSH-16 Application Acknowledgement Type = “AL” • MSH-21 Message Profile Identifier – for alarms = “IHE_PCD_ACM_001^IHE PCD^1.3.6.1.4.1.19376.1.6.1.4.1^ISO” • PID Segment Patient Identification (ignored – HIPAA) – may be useful for traceability, i.e. which patients have been associated with defective, out of rev, or out of calibration equipment • PV1-3 Patient Location – ADT Assigned Patient Location – Unit^Room^Bed, alternative in case RTLS not supported • OBR Event or Alarm Indication – OBR-3 Unique status update ID on event or alarm, OBR-4 = “ALARM^ALARM”, OBR-29 Parent ID for multiple update notifications • OBX Segment, multiple occurrences – pertinent parameters relating to alarm or event • OBX-3 Observation Identifier, OBX-4 Sub-ID FACET, OBX-5 Observation value, OBX-6 Units of Measurement, OBX-7 Range, OBX-8 Flags (priority & class for alarms) • Source MDS/VMDS/Chan • OBX-14 Observation timestamp (yyyymmddhhmmss±zzzz) • OBX-18 Equipment identification (event or alarm source, not the application/gateway that sent it) • How will equipment location (RTLS) be passed – OBX-5 when OBX-4 Sub ID FACET = 6 per ACM TI 2012

  18. CMMS as ACM AR to AM to AC for Staff NotificationsHL7 v2 Acknowledgement Basic Content Received by CMMS • MSH-3 Sending Application – identifies ACM AM application, MSH-4 Receiving Facility – identifies ACM AM application instance, MSH-5 Receiving Application – identifies CMMS application, MSH-6 Receiving Facility – identifies CMMS application instance • MSH-7 Timestamp – when acknowledgement was sent, MSH-8 Security = Empty • MSH-9 Message Type Identification – ACK^xxx^ACK(R01 Observation, R40 Alarm, R43 Event) • MSH-10 Message Control – message ID # • MSA-1 Acknowledgement Code – “AA”=Ok, “AR”=Retransmit, “AE”=Error • MSA-2 Message ID of message being acknowledged • MSA-4 Expected Sequence Number, for transport error retransmission • ERR Segment – used to indicate specifics of an error - ERR-2 Error Location, ERR-3 Error Code, ERR-4 Severity, ERR-5 Application Error Code

  19. For More Information, or to Join Our Efforts To participate or ask questionsplease contact Manny Furst EFurst@Imp-Tech.com Please include: Name, Title, Company Email and Postal Addresses Phone(s)

More Related