An information model designed to align with or meet specific intended purpose.
Notes
- A model or use may represent information in a way that directly relates to the way data was captured or specific requirements for reporting arising from a particular use case.
- In contrast, a model of meaning provides a common representation of particular types of information that supports a range of different uses.
Examples
- Family history information be recorded in different ways depending on when and how the data was collected. Three of the many possible methods of collection are shown below.
Method of Collection | Possible Model of Use Record |
Checkbox in a questionnaire | "Yes" recorded against the label "Family history of heart disease" |
Coded entry in a family history record section | Family history record entry containing: 56265001 | Heart disease| |
Coded entry from a picklist or search | Clinical record entry containing: 275120007 | Family history: Cardiac disorder| |
- A decision support rule may need to show an alert in patients with a family history of heart disease. An effective model of meaning needs to ensure the required information is accessible to the rules engine irrespective of the way it was originally recorded. The table below shows one way to resolve each of three model of use records into a common form to support effective retrieval.
Model of Use Record | Possible Model of Meaning Resolutions |
"Yes" recorded against the label "Family history of heart disease" | Map "Yes" response to questionnaire entry to 275120007 | Family history: Cardiac disorder| |
Family history record entry containing: 56265001 | Heart disease| | Map use of disorder concepts in family history section to the appropriate family history concept 275120007 | Family history: Cardiac disorder| |
Clinical record entry containing: 275120007 | Family history: Cardiac disorder| | No change |
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