Advanced Terminologies
Advanced Terminologies
Terminology
Systems
Standardized Terminology
Also called “Controlled
Terminology” Structured and
controlled languages developed
and approved by an authoritative
body
Healthcare terminology
standards designed to enable and
support interoperability and
information sharing Essential to
the widespread implementation
of EHRs
Standardized Terminology
Consistsof nursing concepts that
represent the domain* of Nursing
Diagnosis Association)
NIC (Nursing Intervention
Classification)
NOC (Nursing Outcomes
Classification)
Standardized Nursing
Terminologies
Omaha System
PNDS (Peri-operative Nursing
Data Set)
ICNP (International Classification
of Nursing Practice)
LOINC (Logical Observation
Identifiers Names & Codes)
SNOMED (Systematized
Nomenclature of Medicine)
Standardized Nursing
Terminologies
ABC (Alternative Billing Codes)
Code
• Mechanism for coding integrative
health interventions by clinician for
administrative billing and insurance
claims.
• provide a more detailed description of
health care services to assure
appropriate reimbursement.
Standardized Nursing
Terminologies
ABC (Alternative Billing Codes)
Code
• Each ABC code consists of a set of five
alphabetic characters that are used to
identify services.
• These five characters are organized in a
hierarchical structure which groups
similar products, remedies, and
supplies together.
Standardized Nursing
Terminologies
ABC (Alternative Billing Codes)
Code
• The five character code is then
followed by a two character code
that identifies the type of
practitioner who provided the
service reflected in the code.
• The ABC code is recognized by the
American Nurses Association
(ANA)
This is an example of an ABC code
Clinical Care Classification (CCC)
System
is a standardized, coded nursing
terminology that identifies the
discrete elements of nursing
practice.
It provides a unique framework
and coding structure.
Used for documenting the plan of
care; following the nursing
process in all health care
settings.[1]
Clinical Care Classification (CCC)
System
They are used to code and classify the six
steps/ standards of the ANA Nursing
Process:
Assessment,
Diagnosis,
Outcome Identification (CCC Expected
Outcomes)
Planning,
Implementation (CCC-Interventions
Action Types), and
Evaluation (CCC-Actual Outcomes).
Clinical Care Classification (CCC)
System
To facilitate patient care documentation at
the point of care CCC of nursing diagnosis
and outcome:
- 182 diagnosis concepts in categories
and sub- categories;
- 3 outcome qualifiers. CCC for nursing
intervention:
- 198 concepts in categories and sub-
categories to represent interventions,
procedures, treatments, and
activities.
The NMDS
(Nursing Minimum Data Set)
Identifies
essential,
common core Intended for use
data elements in all settings
to be collected where nurses
for all patients/
clients receiving
provide care
nursing care
a. Nursing
Care
The
NMDS
includes
three
categories of
elements
b. Patient
c. Service
demographic
elements
s
c. Service elements
• Unique facility or agency
number elements
a. Nursing Care • Unique patient health record
• Nursing Diagnosis number
• Nursing Intervention • Unique number of principle
• Nursing Outcome registered
• Intensity of Nursing nurse
care • Episode admission
• Discharge or termination
• Disposition of patient
• Expected payer for medical bill
b. Patient demographic
elements
• Personal identification
• Date of birth
• Sex
• Race & ethnicity
• Residence
NANDA-I “North American
Nursing Diagnosis International”
Environmental
Psychosocial
Physiological
Health Related
The Problem Classification
Scheme consists of four domains:
Itincludes 40 problems or
diagnoses. Modifiers for the
diagnoses identify the problem as
either an individual or family
problem and as either a health
promotion, potential, or actual
problem.
There are also signs and symptoms
specific to each problem.
The Intervention Scheme is
composed of four categories:
Health Teaching Guidance and
Counseling Treatments and
Procedures Case Management
Surveillance