Search



Page tree

Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

As clinical practice evolves and adapts to meet the changing needs of healthcare, it is important that SNOMED CT reflects these changes, so that clinicians can adequately represent new and emerging techniques/practices. For any implementation of SNOMED CT it is therefore important to establish processes for end users and other stakeholders to submit requests for changes. Related to reference sets the types of changes that may be required include:

  • Inactivation of reference set members
  • Addition of new reference set members
  • Changes to existing reference set members

Types of Refset Changes

Inactivation of reference set members

As for any components in SNOMED CT, reference set members are inactivated if they are no longer required as part of the reference set. The RF2 versioning mechanism is also embedded in the reference set design, which enable full history tracking of each reference set similarly to the SNOMED CT components.

Addition of new reference set members

When new members are requested for inclusion in a reference set, it should be determined whether any existing components in SNOMED CT are sufficient, or whether it requires a new component to be added - either in the International Edition or as part of an Extension.

Changes to existing reference set members

Changes to reference set members can vary, dependent on the refset type and the situation. Examples of changes include:

  • Changing the order assigned to a member of an ordered reference set
  • Changing the annotation associated to a member of an annotation reference set
  • Changing a description from being acceptable to preferred in a language reference set
  • Updating the query for an intensional subset definition represented by a member of a query specification reference set 

Approaches

The type of service implemented to support change requests will depend on the amount of reference sets, the number of users, the organisation etc.. Smaller organisations with relatively a few end-users may apply a simple email service for proposing any changes to the refset. Other institutions may implement dedicated systems that track each change request and support proper management of those.