PACIO Functional Performance Implementation Guide - Local Development build (v1.0.0). See the Directory of published versions
Official URL: http://hl7.org/fhir/us/pacio-fp/ImplementationGuide/hl7.fhir.us.pacio-fp | Version: 1.0.0 | |||
Draft as of 2022-05-13 | Computable Name: PACIOFunctionalPerformanceImplementationGuide |
An individual’s post-acute care information such as cognitive status, functional status, spoken language communication, swallowing, and hearing is crucial information to communicate for successful care coordination at transition of care and for on-going shared care. Care coordination – when a person transitions between healthcare settings, including ambulatory care, acute care, long-term post-acute care (LTPAC), and home- and community-based services (HCBS) – is often fragmented and can lead to poor health outcomes, increased burden, and increased costs. Interoperable health information exchange has the potential to improve patient and provider communications and supports access to longitudinal health information that enables improved efficiencies, improved quality of care, and improved health outcomes. Data should be usable across the continuum of care, and beyond the traditional healthcare system – into the community.
Providers frequently are not receiving complete and accurate information including post-acute care observations in a timely manner, leading to adverse outcomes and additional expenses. Failure to exchange accurate, timely data often leads to inefficient workflows, duplicative data entries, and increased risk of patient harm attributable to missing or inaccurate information. Health Information Technology (Health IT) can significantly alleviate administrative burden by supporting health information exchange across care settings to ensure that the relevant information necessary to care for the incoming patient is delivered to the right person, at the right time- therefore improving patient outcomes, reducing provider burden, improving cost efficiencies, and improving workflows. Moreover, enhanced data exchange would allow for advanced computability, standardization, usability, and real-time data analytics, enabling broader data use by health IT developers, researchers, providers, and payers.
Poor quality discharge information is a major barrier to safe and effective transitions. With 45% of Medicare beneficiaries requiring post-acute care (PAC) services after hospitalization, the need for a seamless exchange of health information is great. The findings from a 2020 study highlight the significant gap in sharing information at transition.The survey assessed continuity between hospitals and skilled nursing facilities (SNF) and found that at transition of care complete mental status information was received by the SNF only 6% of the time. [JAMA Network Open. 2021;4(1):e2033980. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.33980].
The scope of this PAC Clinical Care Implementation Guide (IG) focuses on exchanging post-acute care observations primarily involving PAC transitions with various care settings and HCBS. The impetus for this focus is the amendment to the Social Security Act in 2014 to include the Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care Transformation (IMPACT) Act. IMPACT required the standardization and interoperability of patient assessment in specific categories for PAC settings, including long-term care hospitals (LTCHs), home health agencies (HHAs), SNFs, and inpatient rehabilitation facilities (IRFs). It focuses on standardizing data elements in specified quality measure domains and patient assessment domains for cross setting comparison and clinical information exchange, respectively.
The Act requires:
The PACIO Project is a collaborative effort to advance interoperable health data exchange between PAC and other providers, patients, and key stakeholders across health care and to promote health data exchange in collaboration with policy makers, standards organizations, and industry through a consensus-based approach.
The primary goal of the PACIO Project is to establish a framework for the development of Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resource (FHIR) technical implementation guides (IGs) and reference implementations that will facilitate health data exchange through standards-based use case-driven application programming interfaces (APIs).
This IG is intended to include more broadly clinical domains in post-acute care observations (characteristics that can be tested, measured, or observed and are communicated with a name-value pair structure). We are using the conceptual framework of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (commonly known as ICF), to highlight areas of expansion in the future. More information on the concepts that may be included in this IG can be found in the ICF Browser.
The focus of this IG is on post-acute care observation data (not the representation of the condition, problem, diagnosis, or health concern) utilized by various settings by providing examples using observation data from a variety of observation-based data collection instruments, all of which have code system representation for the question/answer structure. This IG will be expanded to include other relevant observations utilized by health care settings and practitioners more broadly. A post-acute care observation are part of an evaluation or assessment of a patient’s status. The observation data, if present, will include supporting caregivers, non-medical devices, and the time period for which the assessment instruments were performed.
In this IG a set of starter profiles based on some well-established FHIR resources is presented to define data models which specify data elements and coding standards to promote standardization and interoperability.
The implementation guide is organized into the following sections:
This implementation guide relies on the following other specifications:
This implementation guide defines additional constraints and usage expectations above and beyond the information found in these base specifications.