Px Date: Difference between revisions

From CCMDB Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
Line 13: Line 13:


The Px Date is coded as part of the [[CCI Collection]].  
The Px Date is coded as part of the [[CCI Collection]].  
* mandatory for procedures with [[Px Type]] '''acquired''' / [[Acquired Procedure]]
* mandatory for procedures with [[Px Type]] '''acquired''' / [[Acquired Procedure]]
* not allowed for procedures with [[Px Type]] '''admit''' / [[Admit Procedure]]
* not allowed for procedures with [[Px Type]] '''admit''' / [[Admit Procedure]]
Don't enter the time that a procedure was done, just the date. The time component should only be used for [[#Moves]].


{{TT|
== Moves ==<!-- this header is referenced by a template, if changing then resolve that as well -->
* Summary: We now enter a time for TISS PX Date on the day a pt moves to another unit so we can identify in which unit something happened. By the same reasoning, do we also need to do this for all other Px Date entries (CCI Pick or CCI component)? [[User:Ttenbergen|Ttenbergen]] 09:38, 2021 February 4 (CST)
In order to still be able to associate procedures and TISS entries with the location where they happen under [[PatientFollow Project]], we use the time component of the Px Date to link the Px to a [[Boarding Loc]].  
 
** use the same rule for the rule for all procedure times as for TISS.  
}}


For a patient who moves on the day of the procedure, enter the Px Date that corresponds to the [[Boarding Loc]] where the pt was at the time of the procedure:
* if pt is in a location where they were already yesterday, or for the only [[Boarding Loc]] that day, use 0:00
* for a procedure that happened while at a new location that day, enter as Px Date the same DtTm as used for the current [[Boarding Loc]]
** if pt is at third location that day, use the third location's [[Boarding Loc]], etc


== Limitations to field formatting ==
== Limitations to field formatting ==

Revision as of 15:22, 2021 April 29

Data Element (edit)
Field Name: Px Date
CCMDB Label: Px Date
CCMDB tab: CCI
Table: L_CCI_Picklist table, L_CCI_Component table
Data type: date
Length: not stated
Program: Med and CC
Created/Raw: Raw
Start Date: 1988-07-11
End Date: 2300-01-01
Sort Index: 4

The date/time of a CCI procedure

  • SMW

Legacy implementation right in the table

  • Cargo


  • Categories
  • Forms


The Px Date is coded as part of the CCI Collection.

Don't enter the time that a procedure was done, just the date. The time component should only be used for #Moves.

Moves

In order to still be able to associate procedures and TISS entries with the location where they happen under PatientFollow Project, we use the time component of the Px Date to link the Px to a Boarding Loc.

For a patient who moves on the day of the procedure, enter the Px Date that corresponds to the Boarding Loc where the pt was at the time of the procedure:

  • if pt is in a location where they were already yesterday, or for the only Boarding Loc that day, use 0:00
  • for a procedure that happened while at a new location that day, enter as Px Date the same DtTm as used for the current Boarding Loc
    • if pt is at third location that day, use the third location's Boarding Loc, etc

Limitations to field formatting

There have been requests to change this field so collectors don't need to actually type the punctuation components of the date and time. The time component is only needed when there is a second entry on a different unit for the same day (actually, so far it's only required for TISS, see discussion above).

A field can either be set up as a date, which enables the calendar popup, or with more flexible entry filters that would not require the punctuation, but not both. We chose to set the Px Date up in a way that enables the pop-up calendar but requires punctuation.

Discussed 2021-04-21 and decided to keep the default to show the calendar rather than simplify punctuation.

Data Integrity Checks (automatic list)

 AppStatus
Query check CCI DateCCMDB.accdbimplemented

Related Articles

Related articles: