Title: Kaiser Permanente Standards Summit
1A Brief Review of CIMI Plans and Goals
- Kaiser Permanente Standards Summit
- September 7-8 , 2011
- Stanley M. Huff, MD
Phoenix CIMI Meetings January 18, 2013 Stanley M
Huff, MD Chief Medical Informatics Officer
2The Ultimate Value Proposition of CIMI
- Sharing of
- Data
- Information
- Applications
- Decision logic
- Reports
- Knowledge
3Clinical System Approach
- Intermountain can only provide the highest
quality, lowest cost health care with the use of
advanced clinical decision support systems
integrated into frontline workflow
4Decision Support Modules
- Antibiotic Assistant
- Ventilator weaning
- ARDS protocols
- Nosocomial infection monitoring
- MRSA monitoring and control
- Prevention of Deep Venous Thrombosis
- Infectious disease reporting to public health
- Diabetic care
- Pre-op antibiotics
- ICU glucose protocols
- Ventilator disconnect
- Infusion pump errors
- Lab alerts
- Blood ordering
- Order sets
- Patient worksheets
- Post MI discharge meds
5Strategic Goal
- Be able to share applications, reports, alerts,
protocols, and decision support with anyone in
the WORLD
6Order Entry API (adapted from Harold Solbrig)
. . .
Application
COS
Interface
Service
Data
7From Ben Adida and Josh Mandel
8What Is Needed to Create a New Paradigm?
- Standard set of detailed clinical data models
coupled with - Standard coded terminology
- Standard APIs (Application Programmer
Interfaces) for healthcare related services - Open sharing of models, coded terms, and APIs
- Sharing of decision logic and applications
9Clinical modeling activities
- Netherlands/ISO Standard
- CEN 13606
- United Kingdom NHS
- Singapore
- Sweden
- Australia
- openEHR Foundation
- Canada
- US Veterans Administration
- US Department of Defense
- Intermountain Healthcare
- Mayo Clinic
- HL7
- Version 3 RIM, message templates
- TermInfo
- CDA plus Templates
- Detailed Clinical Models
- greenCDA
- Tolven
- NIH/NCI Common Data Elements, CaBIG
- CDISC SHARE
- Korea
- Brazil
10Clinical Information Modeling Initiative
- Mission
- Improve the interoperability of healthcare
systems through shared implementable clinical
information models.
11Clinical Information Modeling Initiative
- Goals
- Shared repository of detailed clinical
information models - Using a single formalism
- Based on a common set of base data types
- With formal bindings of the models to standard
coded terminologies - Repository is open and models are free for use at
no cost
12Goal Models that support multiple contexts
- Message payload
- Service payload
- Decision logic (queries of EHR data)
- EHR data storage
- Clinical trials data (clinical research)
- Normalization of data for secondary use
- Creation of data entry screens
- Natural Language Processing
13Information Model Ideas
Repository of Shared Models in a Single Formalism
Initial Loading of Repository
14Roadmap (some parallel activities)
- Choose a single formalism
- Choose the initial set of agreed data types
- Define strategy for the core reference model and
our modeling style and approach - Development of style will continue as we begin
creating content
15Roadmap (continued)
- Create an open shared repository of models
- Requirements
- Find a place to host the repository
- Select or develop the model repository software
- Create model content in the repository
- Start with existing content that participants can
contribute - Must engage clinical experts for validation of
the models
16Roadmap (continued)
- Create a process (editorial board?) for curation
and management of model content - Resolve and specify IP policies for open sharing
of models - Find a way of funding and supporting the
repository and modeling activities - Create tools/compilers/transformers to other
formalisms - Must support at least ADL, UML/OCL, Semantic Web,
HL7 - Create tools/compilers/transformers to create
what software developers need - Examples XML schema, Java classes, CDA
templates, greenCDA, RFH, SMART RDF, etc.
17Selected Decisions
18Decisions (London, Dec 1, 2011)
- We agree to create and use a single logical
representation (the CIMI core reference model)
comprising one or more models as the basis for
interoperability across formalisms. - We approve ADL 1.5 as the initial formalism in
the repository using OpenEHR Constraint Model
noting that modifications are required. - The corresponding Archetype Object Model will be
included and adapted as the CIMI UML profile - The CIMI UML profile will be developed
concurrently as a set of UML stereotypes, XMI
specification and transformations
19Definition of Logical Model
- Models show the structural relationship of the
model elements (containment) - Coded elements have explicit binding to allowed
coded values - Models are independent of a specific programming
language or type of database - Support explicit, unambiguous query statements
against data instances
20Definition of Logical Model (cont)
- Models shall specify a single unit of measure
(unit normalization) - Models can support inclusion of processing
knowledge - Models can support recommend defaults
- Models can specify assumed values of attributes
(meaning of absence of the item) - Examples can be created for the model
21Isosemantic Models
Precoordinated Model (CIMI deprecated Model)
HematocritManual (LOINC 4545-0)
HematocritManualModel
37
data
Post coordinated Model (CIMI preferred Model)
Hematocrit (LOINC 20570-8)
HematocritModel
37
data
quals
Hematocrit Method
HematocritMethodModel
Manual
data
22Isosemantic Models
- CIMI is committed to isosemantic clinical models
in terms of both - The ability to transform CIMI models into
iso-semantic representations in other
languages/standards (e.g. OWL, UML, HL7) - The ability to transform CIMI models between
iso-semantic representations that use a different
split between terminology pre-coordination versus
structure.
23Isosemantic Models (cont)
- CIMI will select one model within each
isosemantic family that will be the preferred
model for interoperability - (Profiles of exact models for specific uses will
be created by the users professional societies,
regulatory agencies, public health, quality
measures, etc.)
24Terminology
- SNOMED CT will be the primary reference
terminology - LOINC was also approved as a reference
terminology - In the event of overlap, SNOMED CT will be the
preferred source - CIMI will propose extensions to the reference
terminologies when needed concepts do not exist - CIMI will maintain the extensions until they are
accepted by the RT organization
25Terminology (cont)
- The primary version of models will only contain
references (pointers) to value sets - We will create tools that read the terminology
tables and create versions of the models that
contain enumerated value sets
26Some Principles
- CIMI DOES care about implementation. There must
be at least one way to implement the models in a
popular technology stack that is in use today.
The models should be as easy to implement as
possible. - Only use will determine if we are producing
anything of value - Approve Good Enough RM and DTs
- Get practical use ASAP
- Change RM and DTs based on use
27Pleasanton May 10-12, 2012
- Resolution The reference model presented by the
Reference Model Task Force is endorsed as a
starting point and establishes the direction that
CIMI wishes to take. We expect that this model
will be tested and modified as modeling work
continues.
28Pleasanton May 10-12, 2012
- Reference model and associated data types were
approved - We expect that this model will be tested and
modified as modeling work continues. - Agreed that there must be a computable semantic
relationship between elements in a model
29Goals for Rockville Meeting
- Continue modeling work
- Approve a proposal for creating an Editorial
Board - Decide on what tools to use to make models
- Create a team to do an end-to-end proof of
concept - Possible targets FIHR, SMArt, CDA template, HL7
V2, others? - Updates and information sharing OMG AML RFI, CDL
to ADL conversion, finding a parent organization,
FIHR, member survey
30