Date: 2022-06-15
Time:
1030 - 1200 PDT
1730 - 1900 UTC
1830 - 2000 BST
Zoom Meeting Details
Topic: SNOMED Editorial Advisory Group Conference Call
Time: Jun 15, 2022 10:30 AM Pacific Time (US and Canada)
Join from PC, Mac, Linux, iOS or Android:
https://snomed.zoom.us/j/89050682834?pwd=R3dISFhIR0R3NnN2LzNMeGFsT2I5QT09
Password: 251865
Attendees
Chair:
AG Members
- Alejandro Lopez Osornio (ex officio)
- Keith Campbell
- Jeremy Rogers
- Monique van Berkum
- James R. Campbell
- Jeffrey Pierson
- Paul Amos (ex officio)
Invitees
Apologies:
Meeting Files:
Meeting minutes:
The call recording is located here.
Objectives
- Obtain consensus on agenda items
Discussion items
Item | Description | Owner | Notes | Action |
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1 | Call to order and role call | This meeting is being recorded to ensure that important discussion points are not missed in the minutes. The recording will be available to the SNOMED International community. Joining the meeting by accepting the Zoom prompt declares that you have no objection to your comments being recorded |
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2 | Conflicts of interest and agenda review | None noted. | ||
4 | X (person) vs. X of subject (person) | Jim Case | A question from a member country on when to use "X (person)" vs. "X of subject (person)" has exposed issues with determination of equivalence in information models that either split the relationship from the condition vs. using a precoordinated Situation concept to represent the SUBJECT RELATIONSHIP CONTEXT. 3/15/2022 - Update A report on the use of person concepts as values for the SUBJECT RELATIONSHIP CONTEXT attribute is located at: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1LTPSInpRC_HMPniQANM8NL86WCieSAttoPYDS_yxjno/edit#gid=1
Discussion: Previous discussion has been moved to Confluence discussion page at: X (Person) and X of subject (person)
A question was raised as to whether we need the "X of subject (person)" at all since the relation itself defines the relationship. These concepts originated around 2009, but only a few were present at that time. It may have originated due to the need to represent the "Fetus of subject". Suggested that we separate out the difficulties of fetal disorders and findings from the rest of the subject relationships. This also raises the question about the degree of pre-coordination there should be in the International release? The distinction between X (person) and X of subject (person) is lost when looked at in the context of a medical record. The element within the record in which a term is used provides the context in most cases. The most compelling reason to keep the X of subject is related to fetal disorders and procedures, which is something that has been agreed is a separate issue. (i.e. representing "father of fetus" as opposed to "father of the subject of record") The FINDING INFORMER attribute is problematic and needs a comprehensive review for its usefulness. There are also issues with the relative non-specificity of FSNs in the Situation with explicit hierarchy with regards to the subject relationship. It is reasonable to assume that the underlying reason for the addition of the X of subject concepts is no longer relevant. Decision: Test the impact of replacing "X of subject" values from the situation concepts. Inactivate the "X of subject (person)" if no adverse effects. Review the existing person hierarchy for quality. Future considerations will be around roles, gender identity and sexual orientation related to person. |
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8 | Measurement Findings: Proposed changes to FSNs | Paul Amos |
Decisions to date:
Discussion: It is agreed that the replacement of FSNs is less destructive than inactivation and replacement of concepts. This is only relevant where current content is modeled with above and below reference range. Concepts that are inherently ambiguous are still used in clinical recording. Adding forced meaning to these might make them less useful. Suggested to identify these concepts using a refset that they are problematic from an interpretation point of view. This project was an effort to reduce the ambiguity of existing concepts to ensure clarity of meaning. Retention of ambiguous content may provide clinical recording simplicity but may be in conflict with precision. There is a conflict between the utterances used in clinical recording and the desire to provide structured analytical data. The issue may be exposed when looking at new technologies that go from speech to text to coding... Suggested that the ambiguity can be resolved by using other "imprecise" terms such as "increased" for "above reference range" and "increasing" for "increased relative to prior measurement". Alternative description types may assist in representing broader or ambiguous descriptions. Another suggestion is to allow for these imprecise concepts, but mark them as such within the terminology. Decision: | |
10 | AOB | EAG | ||
11 | Next meeting | EAG | ||