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ASTM E 2369 : 2012

Withdrawn

Withdrawn

A Withdrawn Standard is one, which is removed from sale, and its unique number can no longer be used. The Standard can be withdrawn and not replaced, or it can be withdrawn and replaced by a Standard with a different number.

Standard Specification for Continuity of Care Record (CCR) (Withdrawn 2021)

Available format(s)

Hardcopy , PDF

Withdrawn date

21-01-2021

Language(s)

English

Published date

19-12-2012

€122.04
Excluding VAT

The Continuity of Care Record (CCR) is a core data set of the most relevant administrative, demographic, and clinical information facts about a patient’s healthcare, covering one or more healthcare encounters.

Committee
E 31
DocumentType
Standard
Pages
94
PublisherName
American Society for Testing and Materials
Status
Withdrawn
Supersedes

1.1The Continuity of Care Record (CCR) is a core data set of the most relevant administrative, demographic, and clinical information facts about a patient’s healthcare, covering one or more healthcare encounters.2 It provides a means for one healthcare practitioner, system, or setting to aggregate all of the pertinent data about a patient and forward it to another practitioner, system, or setting to support the continuity of care.

1.1.1The CCR data set includes a summary of the patient’s health status (for example, problems, medications, allergies) and basic information about insurance, advance directives, care documentation, and the patient’s care plan. It also includes identifying information and the purpose of the CCR. (See 5.1 for a description of the CCR’s components and sections, and Annex A1 for the detailed data fields of the CCR.)

1.1.2The CCR may be prepared, displayed, and transmitted on paper or electronically, provided the information required by this specification is included. When prepared in a structured electronic format, strict adherence to an XML schema and an accompanying implementation guide is required to support standards-compliant interoperability. The Adjunct3 to this specification contains a W3C XML schema and Annex A2 contains an Implementation Guide for such representation.

1.2The primary use case for the CCR is to provide a snapshot in time containing the pertinent clinical, demographic, and administrative data for a specific patient.

1.2.1This specification does not speak to other use cases or to workflows, but is intended to facilitate the implementation of use cases and workflows. Any examples offered in this specification are not to be considered normative.4

1.3To ensure interchangeability of electronic CCRs, this specification specifies XML coding that is required when the CCR is created in a structured electronic format.5 This specified XML coding provides flexibility that will allow users to prepare, transmit, and view the CCR in multiple ways, for example, in a browser, as an element in a Health Level 7 (HL7) message or CDA compliant document, in a secure email, as a PDF file, as an HTML file, or as a word processing document. It will further permit users to display the fields of the CCR in multiple formats.

1.3.1The CCR XML schema or .xsd (see the Adjunct to this specification) is defined as a data object that represents a snapshot of a patient’s relevant administrative, demographic, and clinical information at a specific moment in time. The CCR XML is not a persistent document, and it is not a messaging standard.

Note 1The CCR XML schema can also be used to define an XML representation for the CCR data elements, subject to the constraints specified in the accompanying Implementation Guide (see Annex A2).

1.3.2Using the required XML schema in the Adjunct to this specification or other XML schemas that may be authorized through joints efforts of ASTM and other standards development organizations, properly designed electronic healthcare record (EHR) systems will be able to import and export all CCR data to enable automated healthcare information transmission with minimal workflow disruption for practitioners. Equally important, it will allow the interchange of the CCR data between otherwise incompatible EHR systems.

1.4Security—The data contained within the CCR are patient data and, if those data are identifiable, then end-to-end CCR document integrity and confidentiality must be provided while conforming to regulations or other security, confidentiality, or privacy protections as applicable within the scope of this specification.

1.4.1Conditions of security and privacy for a CCR instance must be established in a way that allows only properly authenticated and authorized access to the CCR document instance or its elements. The CCR document instance must be self-protecting when possible, and carry sufficient data embedded in the document instance to permit access decisions to be made based upon confidentiality constraints or limitations specific to that instance.

1.4.2Additional Subcommittee E31.20 on Security and Privacy guides, practices, and specifications will be published in support of the security and privacy needs of specific CCR use cases. When a specification is necessary to assure interoperability or other required functionality, the CCR core schema will be extended to meet the profile requirements of the underlying use case, building upon existing standards and specifications whenever possible.

1.4.2.1For profiles that require digital signatures, W3C’s XML digital signature standard (http://www.w3.org/TR/xmldsig-core) will be used with digital certificates. Encryption will be provided using W3C’s XML encryption standard (http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlenc-core).

1.5The CCR is an outgrowth of the Patient Care Referral Form (PCRF) designed and mandated by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health for use primarily in inpatient settings.

1.5.1Unlike the PCRF, the CCR is designed for use in all clinical care settings.

1.6It is assumed that information contained in a CCR will be confirmed as appropriate in clinical practice. For example, the CCR insurance fields should not be construed to address all reimbursement, authorization, or eligibility issues, and current medications and other critical data should be validated.

1.7Committee E31 gratefully acknowledges the Massachusetts Medical Society, HIMSS (Health Information Management and Systems Society), the American Academy of Family Physicians, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Medical Association, the Patient Safety Institute, the American Health Care Association, the National Association for the Support of Long Term Care, the Mobile Healthcare Alliance (MoHCA), the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA) and the American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians (ACOFP) as co-leaders with ASTM in the standard’s development and adoption, and joins them in inviting the collaboration of all stakeholders, including other clinical specialty societies, other professional organizations, insurers, vendors, other healthcare institutions, departments of public health, and other government agencies.

1.8This standard does not purport to address all of the safety concerns, if any, associated with its use. It is the responsibility of the user of this standard to establish appropriate safety and health practices and determine the applicability of regulatory limitations prior to use.

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ASTM E 1382 : 1997 : R2004 Standard Test Methods for Determining Average Grain Size Using Semiautomatic and Automatic Image Analysis
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ASTM E 1869 : 1997 Standard Guide for Confidentiality, Privacy, Access, and Data Security Principles for Health Information Including Electronic Health Records
ASTM E 2212 : 2002 : REV A Standard Practice for Healthcare Certificate Policy
ASTM E 1986 : 2009 Standard Guide for Information Access Privileges to Health Information
ASTM E 1985 : 1998 Standard Guide for User Authentication and Authorization
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ASTM E 1384 : 2001 Standard Guide for Content and Structure of the Electronic Health Record (EHR)
ASTM E 1986 : 2009 : R2013 Standard Guide for Information Access Privileges to Health Information (Withdrawn 2017)
ASTM E 2211 : 2002 : R2010 Standard Specification for Relationship Between a Person (Consumer) and a Supplier of an Electronic Personal (Consumer) Health Record (Withdrawn 2014)
ASTM E 1384 : 2007 Standard Practice for Content and Structure of the Electronic Health Record (EHR)
ASTM E 1384 : 1999 : EDT 1 Standard Guide for Content and Structure of the Electronic Health Record (EHR)
ASTM E 1382 : 1997 : R2010 Standard Test Methods for Determining Average Grain Size Using Semiautomatic and Automatic Image Analysis
ASTM E 1869 : 2004 : R2014 Standard Guide for Confidentiality, Privacy, Access, and Data Security Principles for Health Information Including Electronic Health Records (Withdrawn 2017)
ASTM E 1762 : 1995 Standard Guide for Electronic Authentication of Health Care Information
ASTM E 1869 : 2004 Standard Guide for Confidentiality, Privacy, Access, and Data Security Principles for Health Information Including Electronic Health Records
ASTM E 2147 : 2001 : R2013 Standard Specification for Audit and Disclosure Logs for Use in Health Information Systems (Withdrawn 2017)
ASTM E 1384 : 2007 : R2013 Standard Practice for Content and Structure of the Electronic Health Record (EHR) (Withdrawn 2017)
ASTM E 1986 : 1998 Standard Guide for Information Access Privileges to Health Information
ASTM E 2084 : 2000 Standard Specification for Authentication of Healthcare Information Using Digital Signatures (Withdrawn 2009)
ASTM E 2147 : 2001 : R2009 Standard Specification for Audit and Disclosure Logs for Use in Health Information Systems
ASTM E 1382 : 1997 Standard Test Methods for Determining Average Grain Size Using Semiautomatic and Automatic Image Analysis
ASTM E 2212 : 2002 Standard Practice for Healthcare Certificate Policy
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ASTM E 1762 : 1995 : R2013 Standard Guide for Electronic Authentication of Health Care Information (Withdrawn 2017)
ASTM E 1762 : 1995 : R2003 Standard Guide for Electronic Authentication of Health Care Information
ASTM E 1384 : 2002 Standard Guide for Content and Structure of the Electronic Health Record (EHR)

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