Title: New Desiderata for Biomedical Terminologies
1New Desiderata for Biomedical Terminologies
- Discussant
- James J. Cimino
- Columbia University
2Dilemmas of Biomedical Terminologies
3Dilemmata of Biomedical Terminologies
- Abstract concepts vs. real world entities
- Knowledge about concepts vs. knowledge about
extensions in reality - Terms with context-specific meanings
- Changes in knowledge vs. changes in meaning
4Abstract Concepts vs. Real World Entities
Concept
5Desiderata for Controlled Medical Data
- I - Capture what is known about the patient
- II - No information loss
- III - No false implications
- IV - Support retrieval
- V - Support reuse
- VI - Support aggregation
- VII - Support inference
6Desiderata forControlled Medical Terminologies
- Provide identifiers for meanings we want to apply
to the patient - Make sure the semantics are universally
understood, separate from linguistics - Make sure that, as our understanding changes,
original meaning is not forgotten - Provide a bridge between what we record and how
we reason
7Patient Data as Extensions of Concepts
- Everything we record is an abstraction
- Context tells us how the abstractions are
interpreted - Example contexts of diagnoses in medical records
- Example events
- Example evolution of patient problems
8Everything We Record is an Abstraction
- We dont say that concepts cause concepts or
terms cause terms - Nor do we say that we are storing bits of
pneumonia in the EMR - Pneumococcal pneumonia is something we know
about that we associate with the patient through
interpretation of what we know about the
patient - So is the infiltrate seen on the chest x-ray
- So is the chest x-ray
9Context in the EMR What We See
- Lab results Sodium 130
- Problem list Hyponatremia
- Medication list Hypertonic Saline
- Medication administration Hypertonic Saline
10Context in the EMR What We Record
- At lttimestampgt lab reports ltproceduregt with id
ltIDgt and value ltvaluegt for ltpatientgt - At 10AM EST May 1, 2005 lab reports Stat Serum
Sodium with id 123123 and value 130 for Mr.
Jones - At lttimestampgt ltcliniciangt interprets ltIDgt as
indicating ltconditiongt for ltpatientgt - At 1001AM EST May 1, 2005, Dr. Brown interprets
123123 as indicating Hyponatremia for Mr. Jones
11Context in the EMR What We Record
- At lttimestampgt ltcliniciangt orders pharmacy item
ltformulary itemgt with order id ltIDgt for ltpatientgt - At 1002AM EST, May 1, 2005 Dr. Brown orders
pharmacy time ltHypertonic Salinegt with order id
3233 for Mr. Jones - At lttimestampgt pharmacy delivers ltinventory itemgt
with inventory id ltIDgt for order id ltIDgt for
ltpatientgt - At 1003AM EST, May 1, 2005 pharmacy delivers
Lilly Product 5505 with inventory id 223232 for
Mr. Jones
12Context in the EMR What We Record
- At lttimestampgt decision support system suggests
ltconditiongt for ltpatientgt - At 1004AM EST, May 1, 2005 decision support
system suggests Factitious Hyponatremia for Mr.
Jones
13Concepts or Entities?
- Concepts included in EMR
- Stat Serum Sodium
- Hyponatremia
- Hypertonic Saline
- Lilly Product 5505
- Factitious Hyponatremia
- Entities in Real World
- Mr. Jones
- Mr. Joness Blood
- Serum Specimen 55555
- Lab
- Test ID 123123
- Analyzer 114
- 130 (reading on analyzer)
- Dr. Brown
- Pharmacy
- Lilly Product 5505 223232
- Decision Support System
14What Do Knowledge Do We Need?
- Stat Serum Sodium measures Sodium
- Hyponatremia is defined as Sodium below normal
range - Normal Range of Sodium is 135-145
- Lilly Product 5505 is a Hypertonic Saline
- 223232 is an available instance of Lilly Product
5505 - Analyzer 114 uses Flame Photometry Method
- Factitious Hyponatremia occurs when Sodium is
low, method is flame photometry, and
triglycerides are high
15How Do We Cope with Changes in Our Knowledge
About the Patient?
- Barrrows RC, Johnson SB A data model that
captures clinical reasoning about patient
problems. SCAMC 1995402-405. - Chest pain ? R/O CAD ? Costochondritis ?
Resolved (S/P Costochondritis) - Thread of assessments at points in time
- What do you think the patient has vs. (please
tell the court) What did you think the patient
had?
16How Do We Cope with Changes in Our General
Knowledge?
- Change in
- what tests measure
- formulary
- normal ranges
- definition of disease
- The test if we change update the knowledge, do
we change the old data?
17Referent Tracking
- We do this now (or we should)
- Implicit vs. explicit interpretation
- Each referent still has to correspond to some
meaning - Solution must be practical, usable, and
maintainable
18The Desiderata Revisited
- Concept orientation - what is the alternative?
- Concept permanence and graceful evolution -
version control - Formal definitions - add to knowledge vs.
recognize change - Reject NEC - store what the patient has and
classify later - Multiple granularities - patient level vs. reuse
- Representing context - the implicit meaning in
the EMR design
19General Philosophy of Concepts and Data
- Concept plus Context
- Meaning plus Stamp
Recapitulates
Philately
Ontology