This appeared
last week:
IHTSDO Conference Report October 2014
Created on Friday, 23 January
2015
The IHTSDO Conference Report October
2014 Meeting has been published.
The International Health
Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO) Business Meeting Report
provides summary information on the international activities and areas of work
as discussed at the IHTSDO October 2014 Business Meeting held in Amsterdam, The
Netherlands. The report includes an update from the Content, Implementation
& Education, Quality Assurance, and Technical Committees, as well as the
General Assembly and Member Forum.
Here is the
link:
To understand
what the meeting covered here is the Executive Summary.
2 Executive summary
2.1 Member Forum
• The IHTSDO
is continuing its transition into a services-based organisation, focussed on
customer relationships.
• Future
collaborations to include:
o HL7, regarding value sets to bind
SNOMED CT;
o the Institut national de la santé et
de la recherche médicale (INSERM) with Orphanet;
o the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC);
o the International Union of Pure and
Applied Chemistry (IUPAC); and
o the Radiological Society of North
America (RSNA) and the RadLex vocabulary.
• Proposed
licencing changes, focussing on non-member activity, and changes to member
licence-reporting requirements (i.e. how members need to track and report on
the affiliated licence holders).
• Future
meetings shall involve two annual face-to-face meetings, with additional
quarterly online meetings based on regional – or topic-specific – agendas.
• Aggressive
efforts are planned for the IHTSDO, centred on:
o content authoring projects, for 2015
delivery;
o the replacement of existing authoring
tooling, for 2015 delivery; and
o the promotion of “SNOMED CT Factory”,
involving a move to the continuous delivery of SNOMED CT resources, with a
concurrent reengineering of processes, as required.
• The launch
of online SNOMED CT Foundation education courses and certification in early
2015, with online SNOMED CT Advanced courses to follow.
• The
Standing Committee review is likely to result in future revisions resulting in
a more advisory role, and eliminating the creation or running of work items by
the committees themselves.
• The UK
Terminology Centre (UKTC) is to develop work relating to blood products,
including links back to other IHTSDO members, via the MemberForum.
2.2 Content Committee
• The IHTSDO
is actively improving its workflow and terminology-related deliverables, with a
greater emphasis on specific focus groups and agreed deadlines, encouraging
faster response-times and turnaround on requests.
• The SNOMED
CT release for 2016 will include a greater proportion of new content than any
previous release, with additions to devices, organisms, and dermatology, among
others.
• The need for an approach to the modelling
of genetic procedures, and of the gene taxon itself, was identified as a gap in
SNOMED CT.
2.3 Implementation and Education Committee
• In 2014, the committee successfully
developed the E-Learning Center and created new resources.
• The 2015 work plan is focussed on
developing and conducting a series of E-Learning courses.
• Several guide and specification documents
are being developed, and are either at the review stage or have been published.
• A “Vendor Introduction to SNOMED CT” has
been developed and is out for internal review.
• The Logical Observation Identifiers Names
and Codes (LOINC) and SNOMED CT mapping project is progressing with a
technology preview being released in October 2014, and a second preview
scheduled for March 2015.
2.4 Quality Assurance Committee
• The Critical Incident Policy has finished
development and has been forwarded to the IHTSDO management team for
consideration. However, the committee recognises it requires ongoing
development to expand and improve its coverage for the types of incidents
covered.
• The committee will be collaborating more
closely with the others to improve their alignment with the Quality Assurance
Framework (QAF), and assist in the production of suitable quality reports.
2.5 Technical Committee
• A committee subgroup was formed to analyse
the expansion of the expressivity of SNOMED CT’s description logic, and to
promote SNOMED CT’s representation in Web Ontology Language (OWL). The subgroup
is to be co-chaired by Brian Carlsen (USA) and Dion McMurtrie (NEHTA), and
membership is to include Michael Lawley from the Australian e-Health Research
Centre (AEHRC).
• Standards work relating to the Concrete
Domain Specification is to be driven by the new SNOMED CT description logic
subgroup of the Technical Committee, as part of other possible expansions to
the expressivity of SNOMED CT’s description logic.
• A proposal is to be drafted by the
Technical Committee for the Member Forum to seek endorsement for a completely
automated Release Format 1 (RF1) conversion of Release Format 2 (RF2) that –
although not completely populating RF1 faithfully – meets all requirements,
nonetheless. This will reduce the burden on the IHTSDO of producing RF1
releases.
• More work is required on the definition of
semantics for the SNOMED CT family of languages. To date, work has been on the
syntactic definition.
• A proposal was mooted for the IHTSDO to
produce and provide small samples of RF2 data with predefined patterns of valid
and invalid data for software testing.
• The committee supported the idea of
reworking the Developers’ toolkit with updated technologies and
techniques, rather than dropping it completely.
• The committee will form a subgroup to analyse
open source project governance and contribution models, and provide analysis
and recommendations for Rory Davidson (Head of Applications & Architecture,
IHTSDO) to formalise the IHTSDO’s Open Tooling Framework (OTF) processes.
----- End
Summary
What I am
left wondering with all this is just where the value of this work is trickling
down to the e-Health Community in Australia and just how ready for ‘prime time’
SNOMED actually is.
To date I
have to say the practical impacts seem to be rather thin on the ground. Please
let me know if you or your application are using SNOMED to make a real, on the
ground, difference. I would really like to know we are getting value for all
this effort.
David.
Maybe they are there flogging the 'Lingo' terminology tooling to support the 'SNOMED CT Factory'
ReplyDeleteAfter four years and some 12 million investment it would be a welcome success for NEHTA.
Just for the record IHTSDO found the B2i service a better fit, I trust NEHTA has not pushed Australia out to the fringes internationally and left an expensive mess for ACeH financially and technically to sort out.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.ihtsdo.org/news-articles/ihtsdo-announces-the-purchase-of-b2i-healthcares-snow-owl-terminology-server
SNOMED-CT is now under "Generic Management" so what else do you expect. Real progress will move at glacial speed with such a focus on risk management that nothing useful will happen in our lifetime. Just look at the strides AMT has made ?????
ReplyDeleteJust for the record Anon of Aug 9 9:09am; the SDO has a batting average that rivals the Australian Ashes team. They are 2/2 in tooling. I wouldn't put any money on the third batsman B2i just yet. The score may yet be 3/3.
ReplyDelete