Department of Computer Science, University of Tromsø, 9037 Tromsø, Norway.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak. 2010 Feb 24;10:11. doi: 10.1186/1472-6947-10-11.
The International Classification for Primary Care (ICPC) standard aims to facilitate simultaneous and longitudinal comparisons of clinical primary care practice within and across country borders; it is also used for administrative purposes. This study evaluates the use of the original ICPC-1 and the more complete ICPC-2 Norwegian versions in electronic patient records.
We performed a retrospective study of approximately 1.5 million ICPC codes and diagnoses that were collected over a 16-year period at 12 primary care sites in Norway. In the first phase of this period (transition phase, 1992-1999) physicians were allowed to not use an ICPC code in their practice while in the second phase (regular phase, 2000-2008) the use of an ICPC code was mandatory. The ICPC codes and diagnoses defined a problem event for each patient in the PROblem-oriented electronic MEDical record (PROMED). The main outcome measure of our analysis was the percentage of problem events in PROMEDs with inappropriate (or missing) ICPC codes and of diagnoses that did not map the latest ICPC-2 classification. Specific problem areas (pneumonia, anaemia, tonsillitis and diabetes) were examined in the same context.
Codes were missing in 6.2% of the problem events; incorrect codes were observed in 4.0% of the problem events and text mismatch between the diagnoses and the expected ICPC-2 diagnoses text in 53.8% of the problem events. Missing codes were observed only during the transition phase while incorrect and inappropriate codes were used all over the 16-year period. The physicians created diagnoses that did not exist in ICPC. These 'new' diagnoses were used with varying frequency; many of them were used only once. Inappropriate ICPC-2 codes were also observed in the selected problem areas and for both phases.
Our results strongly suggest that physicians did not adhere to the ICPC standard due to its incompleteness, i.e. lack of many clinically important diagnoses. This indicates that ICPC is inappropriate for the classification of problem events and the clinical practice in primary care.
国际初级保健分类(ICPC)标准旨在促进在国家内部和国家之间同时进行临床初级保健实践的纵向比较;它也用于行政目的。本研究评估了原始的 ICPC-1 和更完整的挪威 ICPC-2 版本在电子病历中的使用情况。
我们对挪威 12 个初级保健点在 16 年期间收集的约 150 万 ICPC 代码和诊断进行了回顾性研究。在该期间的第一阶段(过渡阶段,1992-1999 年),医生在实践中可以不使用 ICPC 代码,而在第二阶段(常规阶段,2000-2008 年)则必须使用 ICPC 代码。ICPC 代码和诊断为每个患者的 PROblem-oriented electronic MEDical record(PROMED)中的问题事件定义了一个问题。我们分析的主要结果测量指标是 PROMED 中没有适当(或缺失)ICPC 代码的问题事件的百分比,以及与最新的 ICPC-2 分类不匹配的诊断的百分比。在相同的上下文中,还检查了特定的问题领域(肺炎、贫血、扁桃体炎和糖尿病)。
问题事件中有 6.2%的代码缺失;有 4.0%的问题事件中存在错误代码,53.8%的问题事件中诊断与预期的 ICPC-2 诊断文本之间存在文字不匹配。仅在过渡阶段观察到代码缺失,而在整个 16 年期间使用了不正确和不适当的代码。医生创建了在 ICPC 中不存在的诊断。这些“新”诊断的使用频率不同;其中许多只使用过一次。在选定的问题领域和两个阶段也观察到了不适当的 ICPC-2 代码。
我们的结果强烈表明,由于其不完整性,即缺乏许多临床重要的诊断,医生没有遵守 ICPC 标准。这表明 ICPC 不适合初级保健中的问题事件分类和临床实践。