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You can't always get what you want. Not all medical terms can or should be represented as is" in SNOMED The terminology should not aid and abet the use of imprecise, inaccurate, or erroneous termsNot all nuances of medical circumstances can be captured and defined within the nomenclatureOver-rel
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1. Concept addition from conception to delivery Or
Why does it take so @#$% long?
2. You cant always get what you want Not all medical terms can or should be represented as is in SNOMED
The terminology should not aid and abet the use of imprecise, inaccurate, or erroneous terms
Not all nuances of medical circumstances can be captured and defined within the nomenclature
Over-reliance on precoordination invites combinatorial explosion and limits expressivity
3. ...but if you try sometimes, you can get what you need The requirements of a controlled medical nomenclature restrict the addition of content
My job is to determine what content can be added, and to add it in a form that does not introduce error or ambiguity to the nomenclature
4. Goals Avoid adding redundant or duplicate concepts to SNOMED
Avoid adding ambiguous, obsolete, or incorrect terms as fully specified names
Accurately define all new concepts
5. Preadmission questions Do we need this concept?
What does the concept mean?
In what context will the concept be used?
Can the concept be defined in SNOMED?
6. Wheres Waldo? Does SNOMED already contains the concept, sometimes under another wording, or a usable equivalent?
Ex: request for Uroabdomen
SNOMED already has an equivalent concept, Urine ascites, not found by searching for uroabdomen
Adding Uroabdomen would create redundancy
Request addition of Uroabdomen as synonym instead
7. Say what? In a controlled medical terminology, each concept must represent a single idea, and the concept FSN should clearly state that idea
BUT
Human and veterinary medical language contains many terms whose meaning is not evident from the wording or which convey multiple meanings
Downer cow
White line disease
Overeating disease
8. What this means: Even accepted medical terms must often be translated, not transcribed, into SNOMED
Just because the clinician said so does not mean SNOMED willor can--say so
9. Say what you mean
If commonly accepted term is ambiguous, but conveys a commonly accepted meaning:
=> add concept
=> give concept unambiguous FSN
=> add common name as description
10. Example 1: Sweeney
= neurogenic atrophy of shoulder muscles
11. Mean what you say: If commonly used medical term conveys more than one meaning:
=> create separate concepts for each meaning
=> give each concept unambiguous FSN
=> assign commonly used term as synonym for each concept
12. Example 2 Overeating disease
= Type C Enterotoxemia
= Type D Enterotoxemia
= Grain Overload
13. Saying 1 + 2 to mean 3 If common term has complex meaning that can be best be captured by post-coordinating existing concepts
=> Deny concept request
=> Supply guidance to use of existing SNOMED concepts
14. Example 3 Pigeon fever
misleading namepigeons do not get or carry it
variable presentation+/- pectoral abscess
= Abscess of pectoral region 76035004
+ Causative agent Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis
OR
= Infection due to Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis
15. Say
what did you mean? Requested term obscure, outdated, inherently vague or meaning is impossible to determine from information given
seek clarification from requestor
determine if concept warranted
16. Just the facts, maam When requesting a concept, you may be asked to:
Seek clarification from a clinician
Supply background information
Explain the concepts projected use
Discuss whether existing SNOMED concept(s) can be used instead
Accept a refusal ?
17. Request: Myelocytoma
Problem: Myelocytoma can refer to
Multiple myeloma
Chronic myelogenous leukemia
A discrete tumor esp. of fowl, composed of myelocytes
Need to know: which meaning is intended
18. Request: Proliferative thrombovascular necrosis
Problem: References lacking
Need to know:
--is this an accepted medical term?
--what is the pathophysiology?
--what is the etiology, if known?
19. Request: Delayed weaning
Problem: Context unclear
Procedure or finding?
If findingnecessarily abnormal?
Need to know: context, to determine hierarchy to which concept belongs
20. Request: Ringwomb
Problem: User requests new concept or guidance to appropriate existing concept
Need to know: exact nature of ringwomb to find if perfect match exists in SNOMED (yes).
21. Request: Chronic moist dermatitis
Problem: Concept irredeemably ambiguous
Need to know: how to break clinicians of using pseudodiagnoses!
22. And finally
. Sliced, diced, buffed and polished concept submitted to SNOMED with suggested FSN, synonyms, and definitions
CAP modeler reviews submissionmay reject, query, or accept concept
If accepted, new concept is created and assigned codes in TDE
New concept appears in next database release