geronto |
|
note on the the structure of ICPC-2. |
|
the structure of ICPC-2. posted 2018, may 05
Process codes include:
A Patient’s reasons for encounter (RFE) may often include:
So a patient RFE could fall into any of the components.
At the end of the consultation, the GP may not have any diagnosis. The GP may be investigating through tests, referral etc. So the “diagnosis” for that consultation for that problem has to remain a symptom or complaint for the moment. E.g. Patient presents with Rectal bleeding (RFE = rectal bleeding code D16). This is the first time he/she has experienced this. Until you do further investigations, you cannot diagnose this. So the problem managed ( in the health record), remains the same as the RFE: rectal bleeding code D16.
Regarding the colours on the ICPC-2 Two pager:
You can see some that some colours are NOT in their correct place. For example, if you look at chapter S (Skin), (copied below my signature block):
We are trying to fix these problems in the development of ICPC-3.
How did this mix up of colours ( components) happen?
IN developing ICPC-2 WICC tried to solve these problems.
Some rubrics were removed because they were too infrequently used ( an merged with other rubrics such as ‘other diseases of ‘’’’’”. However you could not re-use code for the rubric you just removed, because it would lead to confusion between data collected in ICPC-1 and that collectioed in ICPC-2.
So WICC used codes that had NOT been used in ICPC-1, and these were not always available in the correct component. But the new rubric had to be put somewhere.
So, you will see the two new infection rubrics in Chapter S that are NOT with the other infections (S84, and S95), because there was no numerical space left to put them in the correct place with the other infections.
There had been insufficient space in ICPC to place the skin injuries in the limited codes available, even in ICPC-2, and again in ICPC-2), so the injuries remained in Component 1.
Note that during this work, ( then some 15-16 years after the release of ICPC-2), the group used any additional understanding of the aetiology of the rubrics, that had grown over the 16 years, so some of the mixed colours you see are because this improved knowledge assisted in more accurate placement of a rubric into a sub-component ( particularly in the Diagnosis Component (component 7).
I hope this information has helped to some degree.
Has anyone given you an electronic copy of the ICPC-2 BOOK? If not, I think it would help you very much. I do not have a copy to send you. I believe Thomas has a copy he was planning to distribute. I will ask him.
Best wishes in your important work in the Ukraine, Helena Britt
Dr Helena Britt Hon. Professor of Primary Care Research Sydney School of Public Health | Sydney Medical School M +61 (0)411197938 E helena.britt@sydney.edu.au| W www.sydney.edu.au/medicine/fmrc
|
|
Created 05/05/2018 - Last modified 05/05/2018 | |
imprimer ce document -
Primary Health Care Classification Consortium - WICC WONCA |
|