Henry S B, Mead C N
Department of Community Health Systems, School of Nursing, University of California, San Francisco 94143-0608, USA. nursing%
J Am Med Inform Assoc. 1997 May-Jun;4(3):222-32. doi: 10.1136/jamia.1997.0040222.
Our premise is that from the perspective of maximum flexibility of data usage by computer-based record (CPR) systems, existing nursing classification systems are necessary, but not sufficient, for representing important aspects of "what nurses do." In particular, we have focused our attention on those classification systems that represent nurses' clinical activities through the abstraction of activities into categories of nursing interventions. In this theoretical paper, we argue that taxonomic, combinatorial vocabularies capable of coding atomic-level nursing activities are required to effectively capture in a reproducible and reversible manner the clinical decisions and actions of nurses, and that, without such vocabularies and associated grammars, potentially important clinical process data is lost during the encoding process. Existing nursing intervention classification systems do not fulfill these criteria. As background to our argument, we first present an overview of the content, methods, and evaluation criteria used in previous studies whose focus has been to evaluate the effectiveness of existing coding and classification systems. Next, using the Ingenerf typology of taxonomic vocabularies, we categorize the formal type and structure of three existing nursing intervention classification system--Nursing Interventions Classification, Omaha System, and Home Health Care Classification. Third, we use records from home care patients to show examples of lossy data transformation, the loss of potentially significant atomic data, resulting from encoding using each of the three systems. Last, we provide an example of the application of a formal representation methodology (conceptual graphs) which we believe could be used as a model to build the required combinatorial, taxonomic vocabulary for representing nursing interventions.
我们的前提是,从基于计算机的记录(CPR)系统对数据使用的最大灵活性角度来看,现有的护理分类系统对于呈现“护士的工作内容”的重要方面是必要的,但并不充分。特别是,我们将注意力集中在那些通过将活动抽象为护理干预类别来表示护士临床活动的分类系统上。在这篇理论性论文中,我们认为需要能够对原子级护理活动进行编码的分类学、组合式词汇表,以便以可重复和可逆的方式有效捕捉护士的临床决策和行动,并且,如果没有这样的词汇表和相关语法,潜在重要的临床过程数据在编码过程中就会丢失。现有的护理干预分类系统不符合这些标准。作为我们论证的背景,我们首先概述先前研究中使用的内容、方法和评估标准,这些研究的重点是评估现有编码和分类系统的有效性。接下来,使用分类词汇表的英根费尔类型学,我们对三种现有的护理干预分类系统——护理干预分类、奥马哈系统和家庭健康护理分类——的形式类型和结构进行分类。第三,我们使用家庭护理患者的记录来展示有损数据转换的示例,即使用这三种系统中的每一种进行编码导致潜在重要原子数据的丢失。最后,我们提供一个形式表示方法(概念图)应用的示例,我们认为该方法可以用作构建所需的用于表示护理干预的组合式、分类学词汇表的模型。