2420 resultaten

ICD-10

TABLES, STANDARDS

The ICD is the international standard diagnostic classification for all general epidemiological, many health management purposes and clinical use. These include the analysis of the general health situation of population groups and monitoring of the incidence and prevalence of diseases and other health problems in relation to other variables such as the characteristics and circumstances of the individuals affected, reimbursement, resource allocation, quality and guidelines.
It is used to classify diseases and other health problems recorded on many types of health and vital records including death certificates and health records. In addition to enabling the storage and retrieval of diagnostic information for clinical, epidemiological and quality purposes, these records also provide the basis for the compilation of national mortality and morbidity statistics by WHO Member States.
ICD-10 is available in the six official languages of WHO (Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish) as well as in 36 other languages

ICD-10 is currently used in Belgium (in combination with ICPC2) by General Practitioners for codification purpose.

We only provide here a small extract for illustration purpose. The complete table is available on the WHO website.

The version of the table used is specified in the attribute 'SV' of the cd element. In this case, this version number is not the publication number of this site!

Context of use: item element or content element (cd)


ICD-9-CM

TABLES, STANDARDS

The International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (most commonly known by the abbreviation ICD) provides codes to classify diseases and a wide variety of signs, symptoms, abnormal findings, complaints, social circumstances, and external causes of injury or disease. Every health condition can be assigned to a unique category and given a code, up to six characters long. Such categories can include a set of similar diseases.

The ICD-9 was published by the WHO in 1977. According to the World Health Organization Department of Knowledge Management and Sharing, the WHO no longer publishes or distributes the ICD-9 which is now public domain.

ICD-9-CM International Classification of Diseases, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) is a classification used in assigning codes to diagnoses associated with inpatient, outpatient, and physician office utilization in the U.S. The ICD-9-CM is based on the ICD-9 but provides for additional morbidity detail and is annually updated. It was created by the U.S. National Center for Health Statistics as an extension of ICD-9 system so that it can be used to capture more morbidity data and a section of procedure codes was added. This extension was called "ICD-9-CM", with the CM standing for "Clinical Modification".

The ICD-9-CM consists of:

  • a tabular list containing a numerical list of the disease code numbers in tabular form;
  • an alphabetical index to the disease entries;
  • and a classification system for surgical, diagnostic, and therapeutic procedures (alphabetic index and tabular list).

In Belgium, this table is mainly used in hospital settings as compulsory classification for MHS (Minimum Hospital Summary). This use is defined by FPS Health, Food Chain Safety and Environment.

We only provide here a small extract for illustration purpose.

The version of the table used is specified in the attribute 'SV' of the cd element. In this case, this version number is not the publication number of this site!

Context of use: item element or content element (cd)


Week day

TABLES, STANDARDS

Day of the week.

Context of use: weekday element (regimen element)


eBirth caesarean indication

TABLES, STANDARDS

This table is related with the ebirth-mother-medicalform transaction. It has been defined by FedICT.

The contents have been jointly defined by the FPS Economy, the 3 Belgian communities (Brussels, Flemish and French), the FPS Health and CEPIP as part of the description of model I statistical data, established by the Royal Decree of 14 June 1999, and implemented by FedICT for the eBirth project.

Values describe 'reasons to perform a caesarean'

Context of use: content of the item 'caesereanindication'.


eBirth childposition

TABLES, STANDARDS

This table is related with the ebirth-mother-medicalform transaction. It has been defined by FedICT.

The contents have been jointly defined by the FPS Economy, the 3 Belgian communities (Brussels, Flemish and French), the FPS Health and CEPIP as part of the description of model I statistical data, established by the Royal Decree of 14 June 1999, and implemented by FedICT for the eBirth project.

Values describe the 'position of the child at birth'

Context of use: content of the item 'childposition'.


eBirth delivery way

TABLES, STANDARDS

This table is related with the ebirth-mother-medicalform transaction. It has been defined by FedICT.

The contents have been jointly defined by the FPS Economy, the 3 Belgian communities (Brussels, Flemish and French), the FPS Health and CEPIP as part of the description of model I statistical data, established by the Royal Decree of 14 June 1999, and implemented by FedICT for the eBirth project.

Values describe the delivery way.

Context of use : content of the item 'deliveryway'.


eBirth monitoring foetal

TABLES, STANDARDS

This table is related with the ebirth-mother-medicalform transaction. It has been defined by FedICT.

The contents have been jointly defined by the FPS Economy, the 3 Belgian communities (Brussels, Flemish and French), the FPS Health and CEPIP as part of the description of model I statistical data, established by the Royal Decree of 14 June 1999, and implemented by FedICT for the eBirth project.

Values describe monitoring ways.

Context of use : content of the item 'foetalmonitoring'.


eBirth pregnancy origin

TABLES, STANDARDS

This table is related with the ebirth-mother-medicalform transaction. It has been defined by FedICT.

The contents have been jointly defined by the FPS Economy, the 3 Belgian communities (Brussels, Flemish and French), the FPS Health and CEPIP as part of the description of model I statistical data, established by the Royal Decree of 14 June 1999, and implemented by FedICT for the eBirth project.

Values describe 'the origin of the pregnancy'

Context of use: content of the item 'pregnancyorigin'.


eBirth special values

TABLES, STANDARDS

This table is related with the ebirth-baby-medicalform and ebirth-mother-medical form transactions. It has been defined by FedICT.

The contents have been jointly defined by the FPS Economy, the 3 Belgian communities (Brussels, Flemish and French), the FPS Health and CEPIP as part of the description of model I statistical data, established by the Royal Decree of 14 June 1999, and implemented by FedICT for the eBirth project.

Values describe special values allowed for some ebirth items. The allowed values depend on the item.

Context of use: content of some ebirth items.


eBirth type of neonatal department

TABLES, STANDARDS

This table is related with the ebirth-baby-medicalform transaction. It has been defined by FedICT.

The contents have been jointly defined by the FPS Economy, the 3 Belgian communities (Brussels, Flemish and French), the FPS Health and CEPIP as part of the description of model I statistical data, established by the Royal Decree of 14 June 1999, and implemented by FedICT for the eBirth project.

Values describe the type of a neonatal department.

Context of use: content of the item 'neonataldept'.