This
page
is
part
of
the
FHIR
Specification
(v0.0.82:
DSTU
1).
The
current
version
which
supercedes
this
version
is
5.0.0
.
For
a
full
list
of
available
versions,
see
the
Directory
of
published
versions
2.14.7.1.1
Purpose
The
FHIR
USLab
Order
Implementation
focuses
on
identifying
the
requirements,
specifications
and
standards,
and
on
providing
the
implementation
guidance
for
electronic
ordering
of
laboratory
tests
in
the
US
Realm
using
the
FHIR
in
the
RESTful
framework
.
The
scope
of
the
Laboratory
Orders
Interface
Use
Case
includes
requirements
to
enable
a
particular
implementation
of
Electronic
Health
Record
System
(EHR-S)
to
use
standardized
structured
data
in
a
defined
inter-organizational
laboratory
transaction.
The
Use
Case
requirements
are
directed
at
laboratory
test
orders
between
an
Ambulatory
Provider's
EHR-S
and
a
Laboratory's
Laboratory
Information
System
(LIS).
Future
versions
of
this
implementation
may
harmonize
with
existing
guides
to
extend
interoperability
of
laboratory
results
across
care
settings,
e.g.,
acute
care.
2.14.7.1.1
Audience
This
guide
is
designed
for
use
by
analysts
and
developers
who
require
guidance
on
FHIR
resources,
elements
and
specific
extensions
relative
to
the
Laboratory
Results
Interface
(LRI)
initiative
and
HL7
Lab
Order
Conceptual
Specification.
Users
of
this
guide
must
be
familiar
with
the
details
of
the
FHIR
Specification
and
resource
processing.
This
guide
is
not
intended
to
be
a
tutorial
on
that
subject.
2.14.7.1.1
Conventions
This
guide
adheres
to
the
following
conventions:
-
The
guide
is
constructed
assuming
the
implementer
has
access
to
the
FHIR
Specification.
Although
some
information
from
the
standard
is
included
in
this
implementation
guide,
much
information
from
the
standard
has
not
been
repeated
here.
-
The
guide
is
constructed
assuming
the
implementer
SHALL
conform
to
the
FHIR
RESTful
API
-
The
rules
defined
in
the
FHIR
Conformance
Profile
were
used
to
document
the
use
case
for,
and
constraints
applied
to,
the
resources
described
in
this
guide.
2.14.7.1.1
Use
Case
-
Ambulatory
Care
Setting
This
use
case
was
developed
as
a
collaborative
effort
between
the
HHS/ONC
Standards
and
Interoperability
Framework
Laboratory
Orders
Initiative,
the
California
Health
Care
Foundation,
and
the
HL7
Orders
and
Observations
Work
Group.
This
guide
defines
the
following
terms
from
the
historic
paper-based
workflows
in
relation
to
the
supported
use
cases
for
electronic
exchange
of
laboratory
order
information
to
the
OML
message
structure
as:
2.14.7.1.1.1
Definitions
-
Measurement
-
a
single
observation
value
or
calculation
recorded
using
a
single
Observation
Resource.
Note
that
multiple
representations
of
the
same
measurement
may
require
multiple
observation
segments,
e.g.,
quantitative
and
qualitative
statement
of
the
same
measurement.
-
Orderable
Test
or
Laboratory
Order
-
a
DiagnosticOrder
Resource
item
requesting
one
or
more
measurements
(Observation
Resources).
-
Requisition
-
One
or
more
Orderable
Test(s)
transmitted
as
a
new
or
appended
DiagnosticOrder
Resource.
Figure
1:
todo
2.14.7.1.1.2
Scope
EHR-S
and
a
LIS
in
an
ambulatory
care
setting.
This
includes
new,
scheduled,
add-on
laboratory
orders
and
the
cancellation
of
laboratory
orders
that
were
previously
placed.
This
Use
Case
has
four
scenarios:
-
Scenario
1:
Electronic
Ordering
of
New
or
Scheduled
Laboratory
Test(s)
-
Scenario
2:
Electronic
Ordering
of
Add-On
Laboratory
Test(s)
-
Scenario
3:
Requesting
the
Cancellation
of
a
Previously
Placed
Laboratory
Order
by
the
Order
Placer
-
Scenario
4:
Laboratory
Cancellation
of
a
Previously
Placed
Laboratory
Order
2.14.7.1.1.2.1
In
Scope
-
Electronic
ordering
of
laboratory
tests
and/or
panels
in
the
ambulatory
setting
for
the
US
Realm.
-
Defining
the
core
data
elements
required
for
ordering
ambulatory
laboratory
tests
and/or
panels.
-
Laboratory
Order
Placer
(i.e.,
Ordering
Provider)
may
designate
other
non-order
placers
to
receive
results.
-
Harmonization
of
data
elements
that
are
used
in
both
laboratory
orders
and
results.
2.14.7.1.1.2.2
Out
of
Scope
-
Requesting
Status
on
a
Previously
Placed
Laboratory
Order
Electronic
ordering
of
laboratory
tests
and/or
panels
in
an
acute
care
setting,
internally
within
a
laboratory,
referral
orders
placed
between
laboratories,
and
laboratory
orders
outside
the
US
Realm.
-
Note
that
the
authors
of
this
guide
did
not
validate
whether
constraints
on
components
should
be
loosened
to
support
these
use
cases.
This
will
be
addressed
in
a
future
version,
including
definition
of
minimal
incremental
profiles
to
support
these
use
cases.
Until
such
time,
implementers
are
not
discouraged
from
attempting
to
use
this
guide
for
those
use
cases
but
should
recognize
that
they
may
not
be
able
to
remain
fully
conformant.
The
authors
invite
comments
from
implementers
on
their
experience
to
inform
the
next
version.
-
Concepts
related
to:
order
queues,
clearing
houses,
or
other
transport-level
mechanisms
and
protocols
that
may
be
used
to
transfer
or
hold
laboratory
orders
for
later
retrieval
by
a
laboratory
selected
to
perform
the
laboratory
service.
-
Multi-order
status
requests
(for
one
patient
or
multiple
patients).
-
Specification
of
the
required/supported
error
condition
codes
as
part
of
acknowledgements
in
REST
or
with
a
FHIR
Resource.
-
Laboratory
orders
not
transmitted
electronically.
-
Secondary
uses
of
laboratory
order
data.
-
The
human
mechanisms
required
to
resolve
differences
between
the
order
identifier
and
the
specimen
label.
-
Specimen
labeling
and
transport.
-
Physical
transport
level
confirmations.
-
Interactions
between
the
LIS
and
EHR
System
for
add-on
orders
beyond
the
transmission
of
the
order
(to
address
scenarios
such
as
insufficient
specimen
or
late
arrivals
of
add-on
orders).
2.14.7.1.1
Actors
There
are
two
actors
that
have
responsibilities
related
to
the
conformance
profiles
defined
in
this
document:
-
Laboratory
Order
Sender
-
The
originator
of
the
DiagnosticOrder
Resource
Instance
that
declares
conformance
to
"RESTful
FHIR"
and
FHIR
profiles
defined
in
this
guide.
This
actor
is
the
Organization
Resource
referenced
through
the
.orderer
(Practitioner)
Resource
within
FHIR.
-
Laboratory
Order
Receiver
-
The
receiver
of
the
DiagnosticOrder
Resource
Instance
that
declares
conformance
to
"RESTful
FHIR"
and
FHIR
profiles
defined
in
this
guide.
This
actor
is
implied
within
FHIR.
(
i.e.
not
explicitly
referenced
in
the
DiagnosticOrder
Resource
Instance
or
the
linked
resources).
2.14.7.1.1
Orders
for
Ambulatory
Care
Use
Case
and
Context
Diagrams
Figure
2-1.
Use
Case
Diagram
Figure
2-2.
Context
Diagram
2.14.7.1.1.1
User
Story
2.14.7.1.1.1.1
Use
Case
Assumptions
-
Providers
(.orderer)
securely
access
clinical
information
through
an
EHR
system.
-
Users
have
a
need
to
exchange
laboratory
order
data
between
ambulatory
care
EHRs
and
laboratories.
-
An
EHR
system
has
the
ability
to
manage
a
laboratory
order,
including
generating
the
laboratory
requisition
and
sending
it
to
a
laboratory.
-
Requisitions
are
defined
by
laboratory
practice
and
their
exact
instantiation
is
determined
by
trading
partner
agreement.
-
An
EHR
system
is
capable
of
generating
an
order
electronically
and
is
capable
of
receiving
and
processing
acknowledgements,
results
and
cancellations.
-
A
LIS
is
capable
of
receiving
orders
and
cancellation
requests,
and
generating
acknowledgements
and
cancelation
notifications.
-
The
Laboratory
is
capable
of
receiving
laboratory
orders
electronically
and
in
standardized
structured
format.
-
The
EHR
System
and
LIS
both
use
data
models
that
include
discrete
representations
of
patients,
clinician
end-users,
laboratory
requisitions,
laboratory
orders
(which
include
tests
and
panels),
and
laboratory
test
results
(minimally
at
the
level
of
individual
analytes).
-
The
USLabResult
Profile
and
the
USLabOrder
Profile
will
be
synchronized
with
the
goal
that
a
laboratory
that
receives
an
order
conforming
to
the
USLabOrder
Profile
should
be
capable
of
responding
with
a
message
conforming
to
the
USLabResult
Profile.
-
Appropriate
security
and
transport
protocols,
patient
identification
methodology,
order
identification
methodology,
patient
consent,
privacy
and
security
procedures,
coding,
vocabulary,
error
handling,
and
normalization
standards
have
been
agreed
to
by
all
relevant
participants.
-
Legal
and
governance
issues
regarding
data
access
authorizations,
data
ownership,
and
data
use
are
in
effect.
-
Established
network
and
policy
infrastructure
exists
to
enable
consistent,
appropriate,
and
accurate
information
exchange
across
provider
systems,
data
repositories
and
locator
services.
This
includes,
but
is
not
limited
to:
-
Methods
to
identify
and
authenticate
users;
-
Methods
to
identify
and
determine
Providers
of
care;
-
Methods
to
enforce
data
access
authorization
policies;
-
Methods
to
ensure
the
veracity
of
data;
-
Detailed
audit
trails
are
kept
as
necessary
by
all
participating
systems.
-
Security
and
privacy
policies,
procedures
and
practices
are
commonly
implemented
to
support
acceptable
levels
of
patient
privacy
and
security;
i.e.
HIPAA,
HITECH
and
EHR
certification
criteria.
2.14.7.1.1.1.2
Pre-Conditions
Note
:
The
pre-
and
post-conditions
may
not
apply
to
all
scenarios.
-
The
Provider
(.orderer)
has
performed
all
of
the
necessary
checks
for
medical
necessity,
insurance
eligibility
and
any
needed
pre-authorizations.
-
After
a
Provider
(.orderer)
enters
a
laboratory
order,
the
EHR
system
generates
an
electronic
laboratory
requisition
containing
pertinent
information
as
well
as
appropriate
identifiers,
such
as
patient,
order,
and
specimen.
-
The
Laboratory's
test
compendium
has
been
entered
(manually
or
via
automation)
into
the
EHR
system.
-
Information
for
the
cancellation
requests
for
laboratory
orders
has
been
accurately
captured
within
the
EHR
System.
-
All
appropriate
billing
information
is
available
within
the
EHR
system.
-
Specimens
are
labeled
in
accordance
with
established
policies
and
procedures
for
specimen
submission
and
can
be
linked
to
the
order
4
4
CLSI.
Specimen
Labels:
Content
and
Location,
Fonts,
and
Label
Orientation;
Approved
Standard.
CLSI
document
AUTO12-A.
Wayne,
PA:
Clinical
and
Laboratory
Standards
Institute;
2011;
ISBN
1-56238-748-0;
ISSN
0273-3099,
Volume
31
Number
7.
2.14.7.1.1.1.3
Post-Conditions
-
Laboratory
orders
are
successfully
transmitted
electronically
from
the
Provider's
(.orderer)
EHR
System
to
the
Laboratory's
LIS.
The
Receiving
Laboratory
electronically
transmits
acknowledgement
of
receipt
of
the
laboratory
order.
The
received
order
may
be
placed
into
an
electronic
queue
for
further
processing
depending
on
laboratory
workflow
(although
order
queues
are
out
of
scope
for
this
Use
Case).
-
Specimen(s)
associated
with
the
laboratory
order
are
collected
and,
if
necessary,
transported
to
the
laboratory.
-
The
laboratory
processes
the
laboratory
order
and
associated
specimen(s).
This
step
may
include
retrieval
and
processing
of
laboratory
orders
from
a
queue
or
list
of
received
orders.
Order
queues
may
be
used
in
the
LIS
to
hold
electronic
laboratory
orders
until
associated
specimens
are
received
and
the
appropriate
patient
matching
and
registration
occur
(although
order
queues
are
out
of
scope
for
this
Use
Case).
After
patient
matching
and
registration,
the
electronic
order
may
be
electronically
processed
in
the
LIS.
-
If
the
laboratory
order
and
specimen(s)
are
satisfactory
for
testing
the
laboratory
will
perform,
or
attempt
to
perform,
the
test(s).
-
The
laboratory
test
result
is
obtained,
entered/released
in
the
LIS,
and
sent
to
the
Provider's
(.orderer)
EHR
System.
This
is
covered
within
the
Laboratory
Results
Interface
Use
Case.
-
Successfully
transmit
laboratory
order
cancellation
request
from
the
Provider's
(.orderer)
EHR
system
to
the
Laboratory's
LIS.
-
The
Laboratory's
LIS
has
electronically
received
the
laboratory
order
cancellation
request.
-
The
Laboratory's
cancellation
of
a
requisition
(one
or
more
orders)
or
an
individual
order
has
been
electronically
received
by
the
Provider's
(.orderer)
EHR
System.
Note
that
cancellation
of
part
of
an
order
must
be
done
through
a
DiagnosticResult
Resource
as
defined
in
the
USLabResult
Profile.
2.14.7.1.1.1.4
Scenario
1
-
Electronic
Ordering
Of
New
Or
Scheduled
Laboratory
Test(S)
Using
an
EHR
System,
a
Provider
(Order
Placer)
orders
one
or
more
new
laboratory
tests
or
scheduled
laboratory
tests
(including
future
tests)
to
be
performed
by
a
laboratory.
2.14.7.1.1.1.4.1
Functional
Requirements
todo
2.14.7.1.1.1.4.2
Sequence
Diagram
Figure
N-N:
Scenario
1
Sequence
Diagram
2.14.7.1.1.1.5
Scenario
2
-
Electronic
Ordering
Of
Add-On
Laboratory
Test(S)
Using
an
EHR
System,
a
Provider
(Order
Placer)
adds
one
or
more
additional
tests
to
a
previously
transmitted
test
requisition.
Note
that
if
there
is
no
need
to
relate
the
additional
order
to
the
specimen
associated
with
a
prior
order,
the
regular
new
order
must
be
followed.
At
the
time
the
provider
requests
an
order
to
be
added,
this
may
occur
when
the
specimen
is
already
drawn
or
still
needs
to
be
drawn.
The
provider
may
not
know
which
situation
is
in
place.
Therefore,
this
guide
suggests
that
until
there
is
more
clarity
on
how
the
provider's
ordering
system
is
updated
with
specimen
collection
information,
the
provider's
add-on
order
request
is
communicated
as
a
regular
order
and
may
use,
if
known:
-
The
.identifier,
when
using
non-unique
order
numbers,
of
the
original
order;
and/or
-
The
.identifier
that
was
used
when
the
original
order
was
placed;
and/or
-
The
Specimen.identifier
or
other
specimen
data
of
the
specimen
the
order
is
intended
to
be
added
to.
Using
the
first
two
methods
make
it
appear,
other
than
the
transaction
date/time,
as
if
the
order
was
placed
together
and
consistent
with
the
original
order.
The
third
method
clearly
associates
the
new
order
with
the
same
specimen
that
was
already
collected
for
a
prior
order.
Note
that
depending
on
the
state
of
the
order
fulfillment,
the
Laboratory
may
not
be
able
to
perform
the
requested
test
against
the
intended
specimen
as
it
may
be
too
late
for
a
number
of
reasons
(e.g.,
insufficient
specimen,
specimen
too
old).
2.14.7.1.1.1.6
Scenario
3
-
Requesting
The
Cancellation
Of
A
Previously
Placed
Laboratory
Order
The
Provider
(.orderer)
determines
that
one
or
more
orders
from
a
previously
transmitted
electronic
laboratory
requisition
needs
to
be
cancelled
and
requests
via
the
EHR
that
the
Laboratory
cancel
the
performance
of
the
laboratory
order(s).
Since
the
Provider
does
not
know
how
far
the
Laboratory
has
progressed
with
the
performance
of
the
test,
or
may
not
even
have
received
the
specimen,
the
Provider
must
use
the
USLabOrder
DiagnosticOrder
Cancel
Profile.
The
Laboratory
determines
whether
the
test
can
be
cancelled,
or
whether
the
order
has
progressed
too
far
to
cancel.
Laboratories
must
use
the
USLabReport
DiagnosticResult
Cancel
Profile.
Once
the
Provider
receives
any
preliminary
or
final
results,
the
test
cannot
be
cancelled
anymore
and
the
Provider
shall
not
use
the
USLabOrder
DiagnosticOrder
Cancel
Profile.
anymore.
2.14.7.1.1.1.6.1
Functional
Requirements
todo
2.14.7.1.1.1.6.2
Sequence
Diagram
Figure
N-N:
Scenario
3
Sequence
Diagram
2.14.7.1.1.1.7
Scenario
4
-
Laboratory
Cancellation
Of
A
Previously
Placed
Laboratory
Order
The
Laboratory
may
cancel
laboratory
orders
and
send
a
cancellation
notification
message
to
the
Provider
(Order
Placer)
because
it
is
unable
to
perform
the
laboratory
order,
independent
of
the
Provider
requesting
cancellation.
This
applies
to
an
original/initial
order
or
an
add-on
order.
Laboratories
can
cancel
a
test
request
received
by
the
LIS
(or
queue
for
this
purpose)
any
time
before
the
test
report
(preliminary
or
final)
is
transmitted
to
the
provider(s).
Laboratories
must
use
the
USLabReport
DiagnosticResult
Cancel
Profile.
See
that
Implementation
Guide
for
details.
2.14.7.1.1
Key
Technical
Decisions
2.14.7.1.1.1
Profile
And
Component
Architecture
This
guide
uses
FHIR
profiles
on
the
following
resource
to
define
a
minimum
set
of
requirements
to
enable
the
successful
exchange
of
laboratory
orders:
-
DiagnosticOrder
-
DiagnosticReport
-
Organization
-
Media
-
Organization
-
Patient
-
Practitioner
-
Specimen
The
main
objective
is
to
ensure
that
EHR
systems
and
Laboratory
systems
can
exchange
laboratory
orders
with
minimum
if
any
modifications
from
one
combination
to
another
combination
of
software,
while
maintaining
flexibility
to
enable
software
developers
to
provide
more
capabilities
using
the
same
core
Resource
definitions.
2.14.7.1.1.2
Use
Of
Vocabulary
Standards
This
guide
calls
for
specific
vocabulary
standards
for
the
exchange
of
laboratory
information
such
as
LOINC
and
SNOMED.
Standard
vocabularies,
particularly
coded
laboratory
tests
and
their
results,
enable
automated
decision
support
for
patient
healthcare,
as
well
as
for
public
health
surveillance
of
populations.
Value
Sets
resource
are
provided
as
part
of
this
implementation.
2.14.7.1.1.3
Scope
Of
Implementation
Due
to
receiving
system
variations
and
need,
this
guide
does
not
specifically
indicate
for
each
field
whether
to
store
it
or
not.
This
is
left
to
the
individual
system's
scope
and
purpose.
2.14.7.1.1.4
Ask
At
Order
Entry
(AOE)
Observations
Ask
at
Order
Entry
(AOE)
responses
are
recorded
as
observations
that
provide
critical
information
for
the
calculation
or
interpretation
of
some
lab
results
or
to
satisfy
state
and
federal
health
agency
mandated
information
gathering
requirements,
e.g.,
for
blood
lead
testing.
Not
every
order
will
have
the
need
for
AOE
questions
and
associated
observations.
The
lab
will
indicate
if
and
which
AOEs
to
include
with
the
order
in
their
test
compendium.
Examples
of
the
type
of
information
gathered
from
a
patient
include
employment
information,
pregnancy
status,
the
date
of
the
last
menstrual
period,
mother's
age,
and
questions
about
family
and
personal
history.
In
some
cases
there
may
be
AOEs
that
request
the
outcome
of
previous
results
phrased
as
a
question,
e.g.,
"Was
your
previous
pap
abnormal?"
AOE
responses
can
take
several
formats,
including
but
not
limited
to
-
Yes/No
(and
coded)
to
answer
questions
like
"Is
this
your
first
pregnancy?"
-
A
code
drawn
from
a
value
set
to
provide
a
coded
response
to,
e.g.,
"What
ethnicity
do
you
consider
yourself
to
be?"
-
A
number
with
units
for
the
mother's
age
-
A
date
format
for
the
patient's
last
menstrual
period.
.supporting
information
element
with
type
Reference(Observation)
must
be
used
in
the
DiagnosticOrder
Resource
to
convey
these
Ask
at
Order
Entry
questions.
Although
not
strictly
asked
at
order
entry,
other
supporting
clinical
information
about
the
patient
collected
during
specimen
collection,
e.g.,
fasting
status
of
the
patient,
are
considered
AOE
observations
for
purposes
of
this
guide
and
must
be
communicated
using
the
.supporting
information
element
with
type
Reference(Observation)
as
well.
LOINC
shall
be
used
as
the
standard
coding
system
for
AOE
questions
if
an
appropriate
and
valid
LOINC
code
exists.
The
LOINC
and
local
code
describing
the
question
will
be
placed
in
Observation.name
element.
Appropriate
and
valid
status
is
defined
in
the
LOINC
Manual
Section
11.2
Classification
of
LOINC
Term
Status.
If
a
local
coding
system
is
in
use,
both
the
LOINC
and
the
local
code
should
also
be
sent
to
help
with
identification
of
coding
issues.
When
no
valid
LOINC
exists,
the
local
code
may
be
the
only
code
sent.
2.14.7.1.1.4.1
Special
Considerations
Note
that
various
Ask
at
Order
Entry
questions
may
appear
to
have
specific
elements
in
FHIR
Resources.
When
a
clinically
relevant
value
is
asked
through
an
Ask
at
Order
Entry
question
it
must
be
conveyed
through
the
OBX
segments
as
described
above
as
these
values
are
used
for
clinical
interpretations
rather
than
through
a
seemingly
similar
FHIR
element.
The
following
provide
specific
examples
and
guidance
whether
to
use
a
FHIR
element
or
the
supporting
information
element
with
type
Reference(Observation).
This
is
list
is
not
meant
to
be
exhaustive:
-
Date
of
Birth
-
Always
use
Patient.birthDate
and
should
never
be
asked
as
an
AOE
as
there
is
only
one
at
any
point
in
time.
-
The
extension
us-core-race(http://hl7.org/fhir/StructureDefinition/us-core-race)
is
provided
for
demographic
(administrative/billing),
not
clinical
use
and
is
bound
to
define
five
race
categories
as
prescribed
by
federal
standards.
The
lab
must
provide
an
AOE
for
those
tests
where
Race
drives
the
interpretation
of
results.
The
value
must
be
determined
by
the
Ordering
Provider
and
must
be
sent
as
the
.supporting
information
element
with
type
Reference(Observation).
Note
that
state
and/or
national
regulations
may
dictate
other
behaviors.
-
The
extension
us-core-ethnicity(http://hl7.org/fhir/StructureDefinition/us-core-ethnicity)
is
provided
for
demographic
(administrative/billing),
not
clinical
use
and
is
bound
to
specify
two
ethnicity
categories
as
prescribed
by
federal
standards.
The
lab
must
provide
an
AOE
where
Ethnicity
drives
the
interpretation
of
results.
The
value
must
be
determined
by
the
Ordering
Provider
and
must
be
sent
as
the
.supporting
information
element
with
type
Reference(Observation.
Note
that
state
and/or
national
regulations
may
dictate
other
behaviors.
More
specific
race
and
ethnicity
values
are
available,
but
not
limited
to,
those
found
v3
Code
System
Race
and
v3
Code
System
Ethnicity
.
2.14.7.1.1.5
Communication
Of
Other
Clinical
Information
Or
Prior
Results
Should
the
need
arise
to
send
results
not
obtained
at
the
time
of
order
entry
or
specimen
collection
and/or
those
requiring
full
results
report
structure
such
as
culture/sensitivity
reports.
Use
the
USlabOrder
DiagnosticReport
priorResults
extension.
2.14.7.1.1
Error
Handling
Refer
to
the
FHIR
Specification
on
REST
status
codes
and
the
use
of
the
OperationOutcome
Resource
when
further
information
about
the
transaction
error
is
needed.
Note
to
balloters:
The
error
handling
specifications
are
currently
not
fully
defined
for
this
implementation.
2.14.7.1.1
Additional
Implementation
Guidance
-
Other
2.14.7.1.1.1
Clinical
Laboratory
Improvement
Amendments
Considerations
In
the
United
States,
clinical
laboratory
testing
of
human
specimens
is
regulated
by
the
Clinical
Laboratory
Improvements
Amendments
of
1988
(CLIA).
Several
sections
of
the
regulations
implementing
CLIA
impact
how
electronic
laboratory
data
is
formatted
for
the
US
Realm
and
these
are
outlined
in
this
section.
Impacted
areas
include
mandatory
test
request
requirements.
CLIA
Regulation
Specifics
.
2.14.7.1.1.2
Mandatory
Ordering
Requirements
Section
493.1241
of
the
CLIA
Regulations
requires
the
laboratory
to
have
a
written
or
electronic
request
for
patient
testing
from
an
authorized
person,
and
defines
items
that
must
appear
as
part
of
a
clinical
laboratory
test
request
.
The
laboratory
may
accept
oral
requests
for
laboratory
tests
if
it
solicits
a
written
or
electronic
authorization
within
30
days
of
the
oral
request
and
maintains
the
authorization
or
documentation
of
its
efforts
to
obtain
the
authorization.
Interpretative
guidelines
on
the
elements
required
in
a
test
requisition
.
Specific
fields
impacted
include
the
following:
|
FHIR
element
|
CLIA
Requirement.
|
|
Patient.name
|
The
patient's
name
or
unique
patient
identifier.
|
|
Patient.gender
|
The
sex
and
age
or
date
of
birth
of
the
patient.
|
|
DiagnosticOrder.orderer
|
The
name
and
address
or
other
suitable
identifiers
of
the
authorized
person
requesting
the
test.
|
|
DiagnosticOrder.orderer
|
The
individual
responsible
for
using
the
test
results.
|
|
Practitioner.organization
|
The
name
and
address
of
the
laboratory
submitting
the
specimen.
|
|
Practitioner.telecom|Organization.telecom
|
Contact
person
to
enable
the
reporting
of
imminently
life
threatening
laboratory
results
or
panic
or
alert
values.
|
|
DiagnosticOrder.name
|
The
test(s)
to
be
performed.
|
|
DiagnosticOrder.supportingInformation
|
For
Pap
smears,
the
patient's
last
menstrual
period,
and
indication
of
whether
the
patient
had
a
previous
abnormal
report,
treatment
or
biopsy.
|
|
Specimen.type
|
The
source
(type)
of
the
specimen,
when
appropriate.
|
|
Specimen.collection.collected[x]
|
The
date
and,
if
appropriate,
time
of
specimen
collection.
|
|
DiagnosticOrder.supportingInformation
|
Any
additional
information
relevant
and
necessary
for
a
specific
test
to
ensure
accurate
and
timely
testing
and
reporting
of
results,
including
interpretation,
if
applicable.
|
2.14.7.1.1.3
Glossary
-
Analyte:
Component
represented
in
the
name
of
a
measurable
quantity.
It
is
the
most
granular
level
at
which
measurements
are
made
and
always
represented
using
a
single
Observation
segment
group
-
Cancellation:
Act
of
cancelling
the
order.
-
Electronic
Health
Record:
Clinical
information
for
a
specific
patient
that
is
stored
electronically
within
an
EHR-S.
Electronic
Health
Record
System
(EHR-S)
This
IG
uses
this
term
in
the
same
context
as
stated
in
the
"HL7
EHR
System
Functional
Model
White
Paper"
Section
4
Definitions
(HL7
2004
www.hl7.org):
"It
is
important
to
note
that
the
DSTU
does
not
attempt
to
establish
another
definition
for
EHR
Systems,
but
chooses
to
utilize
existing
definitions
that
include
the
concept
of
EHR
Systems
as
a
system
(at
least
one)
or
a
system-of-
systems
that
cooperatively
meet
the
needs
of
the
end
user."
-
Future
Order:
A
future
order
is
an
order
with
a
start
date/time
where
that
start
date/time
indicates
the
earliest
time
the
specimen
can
be
collected.
-
Laboratory:
A
facility
or
organization
that
performs
laboratory
testing
on
specimens
for
the
purpose
of
providing
information
for
the
diagnosis,
prevention,
treatment
of
disease
or
impairment,
or
assessment
of
health
for
humans.
Laboratory
Information
System
(LIS)
An
information
system
that
receives,
processes,
and
stores
information
related
to
laboratory
processes.
LIS
may
interface
with
HIS
and
EHR
applications.
This
definition
is
very
minimal
and
omits
many
features
and
capabilities
that
are
typically
associated
with
laboratory
information
systems.
This
minimal
characterization
is
intentional,
as
to
include
the
broadest
possible
set
of
LIS
systems
in
the
use
case.
The
minimal
nature
of
the
definition
by
no
means
excludes
LIS
with
significantly
greater
capabilities.
-
Laboratory
Order:
a
DiagnosticOrder
Resource
item
requesting
one
or
more
measurements
(Observation
Resources).
Synonymous
with
a
Requisition
when
referring
to
a
single
DiagnosticOrder
Resource
item.
-
Laboratory
Order
System:
Software,
either
stand-alone
or
as
part
of
an
EHR
system,
used
by
a
Provider
(Order
Placer)
to
manage
a
laboratory
order,
including
generating
the
laboratory
requisition
and
sending
it
to
a
laboratory.
Typically
a
laboratory
order
system
is
an
integral
part
of
an
order
management
system
that
enables
users
to
manage
orders
for
many
different
types
of
services,
procedures,
supplies,
etc.
Since
this
guide
only
focuses
on
data
exchange
relative
to
laboratory
orders
it
is
purposely
using
a
very
limited
definition.
-
Laboratory
Requisition:
A
set
of
information
that
constitutes
an
official
request
for
one
or
more
laboratory
tests
to
be
performed
on
an
individual
patient.
A
laboratory
requisition
is
specified
in
a
clinical
setting
and
communicated
to
a
laboratory
as
a
discrete
paper
or
electronic
artifact.
Laboratory
requisitions
always
include
at
least
one
test
order.
In
terms
of
a
FHIR
order
transaction
it
represents
one
or
more
DiagnosticOrders
Resource
item(s).
-
Newborn:
The
precise
cutoff
when
a
patient
is
considered
a
newborn
or
an
infant
is
subject
to
interpretation
and
this
guide
does
not
intend
to
provide
a
definitive
answer
to
that.
For
further
background
the
reader
is
directed
to
the
following
resources:
-
Orderable
Test:
A
request
to
perform
an
individual
test
or
panel.
It
always
refers
to
a
single
DiagnosticOrder
Resource
item.
and
may
have
one
or
more
associated
analytes
(bservations).
-
Panel:
While
there
are
differences
in
the
meanings
of
the
terms
"panel"
among
various
laboratories,
for
the
purposes
of
this
guide,
it
is
defined
as
a
grouping
of
procedures
that
measure
multiple
analytes
from
a
single
specimen
(or
multiple
specimens
in
some
cases)
and
can
be
requested
through
one
laboratory
order.
This
is
also
referred
to
as
a
battery.
For
example,
a
CBC
or
a
urinalysis
may
be
referred
to
as
a
panel.
-
Order
Set:
A
set
of
laboratory
orders
that
involve
multiple
tests
and
panels
and
that
may
require
multiple
specimens,
but
can
be
requested
as
a
single
unit
for
convenience.
For
example,
a
"diabetic
order
set
profile"
might
include
a
CBC,
a
glycosylated
hemoglobin
test,
and
a
urinalysis.
The
term
"panel"
is
frequently
used
interchangeably
with
"order
set",
thus
an
order
set
profile
that
contains
a
variety
of
laboratory
test
orders
that
may
be
on
its
own
or
be
combined
with
other
test
orders
(e.g.,
radiology
image,
consult,
etc.)
can
be
considered
an
order
set.
Order
sets
shall
not
be
communicated
to
the
laboratory.
Request
for
Cancellation
(RFC)
Request
by
the
Provider
(Order
Placer)
not
to
perform
the
order.
-
Test:
A
medical
procedure
or
named
set
of
related
procedures
that
involves
analyzing
one
analyte
using
a
single
sample
of
blood,
urine,
or
other
specimen
from
a
patient
for
the
purpose
of
diagnosing
a
disease
or
medical
condition,
planning
or
evaluating
treatment,
or
monitoring
the
course
of
a
disease.