A Method of Assessment of Reliability of Coding Clinical terms to ICD-10 and ICPC Using ENCODE-FMΩ, a Primary Care Controlled Clinical Terminology

Background: Data entry into electronic medical records remains a barrier to their use in primary care. One of the difficulties in data recording has been the use of terminologies unsuited to clinical data entry by physicians. Canada has chosen ICD-10 as its standard of classification of medical diag...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Robert Bernstein, Gary Hollingworth, Gary Viner, Paul Miller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT 2000-02-01
Series:Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hijournal.bcs.org/index.php/jhi/article/view/225
id doaj-8d52ba7fab4d4e0fb99cee21b232d007
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8d52ba7fab4d4e0fb99cee21b232d0072020-11-24T23:20:06ZengBCS, The Chartered Institute for ITJournal of Innovation in Health Informatics2058-45552058-45632000-02-0191121510.14236/jhi.v9i1.225167A Method of Assessment of Reliability of Coding Clinical terms to ICD-10 and ICPC Using ENCODE-FMΩ, a Primary Care Controlled Clinical TerminologyRobert BernsteinGary HollingworthGary VinerPaul MillerBackground: Data entry into electronic medical records remains a barrier to their use in primary care. One of the difficulties in data recording has been the use of terminologies unsuited to clinical data entry by physicians. Canada has chosen ICD-10 as its standard of classification of medical diagnoses and the World Organization of Family Doctors created and uses ICPC-2. In this study, we tested a clinical terminology for reliability of classification. ICD-10 is not intended to be used by clinicians as care is given, and ICPC is too small to be useful to follow patients in a clinical record. ENCODE-FMΩ is a clinical terminology specifically designed to overcome these limitations and provide both clinical specificity of health problems for patient care, and data aggregation for statistics and research. This study was intended both to test the reliability of data entry using ENCODE-FMΩ and to serve as a model methodology for testing vocabularies in general. Method: Terms for "reason for encounter" taken from a random selection of encounter forms in family practice were coded by five different physician coders using a computerised search engine for ENCODE-FMΩ. Intraclass correlations were calculated to see how well clinical data grouped to ICD-10 and ICPC. Results: Use of the ENCODE-FMΩ clinical terminology resulted in highly reliable data aggregation to the standard international classifications ICD-10 and ICPC. Intraclass correlations were .87 (p<.001) and .85 (p<.001). Interpretation: The study shows that the method of assessment is both simple and acceptable. ENCODE-FMΩ can be used reliably for data entry into an electronic medical record, and analysis of coding errors suggests that direct data entry by care providers would be more reliable than third party coding. Physician coders prefer simple partial word searches.https://hijournal.bcs.org/index.php/jhi/article/view/225ClassificationsterminologiesICD-10ICPCENCODE-FMΩclinical vocabularies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert Bernstein
Gary Hollingworth
Gary Viner
Paul Miller
spellingShingle Robert Bernstein
Gary Hollingworth
Gary Viner
Paul Miller
A Method of Assessment of Reliability of Coding Clinical terms to ICD-10 and ICPC Using ENCODE-FMΩ, a Primary Care Controlled Clinical Terminology
Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics
Classifications
terminologies
ICD-10
ICPC
ENCODE-FMΩ
clinical vocabularies
author_facet Robert Bernstein
Gary Hollingworth
Gary Viner
Paul Miller
author_sort Robert Bernstein
title A Method of Assessment of Reliability of Coding Clinical terms to ICD-10 and ICPC Using ENCODE-FMΩ, a Primary Care Controlled Clinical Terminology
title_short A Method of Assessment of Reliability of Coding Clinical terms to ICD-10 and ICPC Using ENCODE-FMΩ, a Primary Care Controlled Clinical Terminology
title_full A Method of Assessment of Reliability of Coding Clinical terms to ICD-10 and ICPC Using ENCODE-FMΩ, a Primary Care Controlled Clinical Terminology
title_fullStr A Method of Assessment of Reliability of Coding Clinical terms to ICD-10 and ICPC Using ENCODE-FMΩ, a Primary Care Controlled Clinical Terminology
title_full_unstemmed A Method of Assessment of Reliability of Coding Clinical terms to ICD-10 and ICPC Using ENCODE-FMΩ, a Primary Care Controlled Clinical Terminology
title_sort method of assessment of reliability of coding clinical terms to icd-10 and icpc using encode-fmω, a primary care controlled clinical terminology
publisher BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT
series Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics
issn 2058-4555
2058-4563
publishDate 2000-02-01
description Background: Data entry into electronic medical records remains a barrier to their use in primary care. One of the difficulties in data recording has been the use of terminologies unsuited to clinical data entry by physicians. Canada has chosen ICD-10 as its standard of classification of medical diagnoses and the World Organization of Family Doctors created and uses ICPC-2. In this study, we tested a clinical terminology for reliability of classification. ICD-10 is not intended to be used by clinicians as care is given, and ICPC is too small to be useful to follow patients in a clinical record. ENCODE-FMΩ is a clinical terminology specifically designed to overcome these limitations and provide both clinical specificity of health problems for patient care, and data aggregation for statistics and research. This study was intended both to test the reliability of data entry using ENCODE-FMΩ and to serve as a model methodology for testing vocabularies in general. Method: Terms for "reason for encounter" taken from a random selection of encounter forms in family practice were coded by five different physician coders using a computerised search engine for ENCODE-FMΩ. Intraclass correlations were calculated to see how well clinical data grouped to ICD-10 and ICPC. Results: Use of the ENCODE-FMΩ clinical terminology resulted in highly reliable data aggregation to the standard international classifications ICD-10 and ICPC. Intraclass correlations were .87 (p<.001) and .85 (p<.001). Interpretation: The study shows that the method of assessment is both simple and acceptable. ENCODE-FMΩ can be used reliably for data entry into an electronic medical record, and analysis of coding errors suggests that direct data entry by care providers would be more reliable than third party coding. Physician coders prefer simple partial word searches.
topic Classifications
terminologies
ICD-10
ICPC
ENCODE-FMΩ
clinical vocabularies
url https://hijournal.bcs.org/index.php/jhi/article/view/225
work_keys_str_mv AT robertbernstein amethodofassessmentofreliabilityofcodingclinicaltermstoicd10andicpcusingencodefmōaprimarycarecontrolledclinicalterminology
AT garyhollingworth amethodofassessmentofreliabilityofcodingclinicaltermstoicd10andicpcusingencodefmōaprimarycarecontrolledclinicalterminology
AT garyviner amethodofassessmentofreliabilityofcodingclinicaltermstoicd10andicpcusingencodefmōaprimarycarecontrolledclinicalterminology
AT paulmiller amethodofassessmentofreliabilityofcodingclinicaltermstoicd10andicpcusingencodefmōaprimarycarecontrolledclinicalterminology
AT robertbernstein methodofassessmentofreliabilityofcodingclinicaltermstoicd10andicpcusingencodefmōaprimarycarecontrolledclinicalterminology
AT garyhollingworth methodofassessmentofreliabilityofcodingclinicaltermstoicd10andicpcusingencodefmōaprimarycarecontrolledclinicalterminology
AT garyviner methodofassessmentofreliabilityofcodingclinicaltermstoicd10andicpcusingencodefmōaprimarycarecontrolledclinicalterminology
AT paulmiller methodofassessmentofreliabilityofcodingclinicaltermstoicd10andicpcusingencodefmōaprimarycarecontrolledclinicalterminology
_version_ 1725575995523596288