1. Allergic and hypersensitivity condition in the International Patients’ Summary (IPS) standard: The need of updates through the International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-11
- Author
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Luciana Kase Tanno, MD, PhD, Alain Perie, PhD, Jonathan A. Bernstein, MD, James L. Sublett, MD, Karapet Davtyan, MD, MPH, MBA, Frederic Berard, MD, PhD, Ruby Pawankar, MD, PhD, Marylin Valentin Rostan, MD, Herberto Chong, MD, PhD, Anahi Yañez, MD, Ignacio J. Ansontegui, MD, PhD, Motohiro Ebisawa, MD, PhD, Gary W.K. Wong, MD, PhD, Mario Morais-Almeida, MD, Bryan Martin, MD, Yann Briand, PhD, and Pascal Demoly, MD, PhD
- Subjects
Allergy ,Anaphylaxis ,Classification ,Coding ,Epidemiology ,Hypersensitivity ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
In 2010, the United States Human and Health Services (US HHS) and the European Union's (EU) Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology signed a memorandum of understanding to stimulate cooperation surrounding health-related information communications technology. The key project that emerged from this agreement is the International Patient Summary (IPS), intended to provide succinct clinically relevant patient summaries, which are generalizable and condition-independent, that can be readily used by all clinicians for the care of patients. Although allergies are included in the main information required by the IPS library and framework, it is misrepresented which leads to underdiagnosis or misdiagnosis of patients suffering from allergic and hypersensitivity conditions (A/H). The French and Montpellier World Health Organization (WHO) Collaborating Centres have provided arguments for supporting representation of A/H in the IPS. These are based on the relevance of the new classification of A/H in the WHO International Classification of Diseases 11th version (ICD-11), and the need for alignment of eHealth tools with harmonized health information. We first present the A/H in the IPS initiative with the mission of producing an international information system that can be used globally in electronic health records to standardize clinical diagnoses and facilitate communication between clinicians caring for patients with A/H diseases. It is believed this initiative will provide a strong voice for the allergy community and an effective process for improving the quality of health data that will optimize medical care for our patients worldwide.
- Published
- 2024
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