HL7 Terminology (THO)
6.1.0 - Publication International flag

This page is part of the HL7 Terminology (v6.1.0: Release) based on FHIR (HL7® FHIR® Standard) v5.0.0. This is the current published version in its permanent home (it will always be available at this URL). For a full list of available versions, see the Directory of published versions

ValueSet: ActRelationshipIsEtiologyFor

Official URL: http://terminology.hl7.org/ValueSet/v3-ActRelationshipIsEtiologyFor Version: 3.0.0
Active as of 2014-03-26 Responsible: Health Level Seven International Computable Name: ActRelationshipIsEtiologyFor
Other Identifiers: OID:2.16.840.1.113883.1.11.19967

Copyright/Legal: This material derives from the HL7 Terminology THO. THO is copyright ©1989+ Health Level Seven International and is made available under the CC0 designation. For more licensing information see: https://terminology.hl7.org/license.html

An assertion that a new observation was assumed to be the cause for another existing observation. The assumption is attributed to the same actor who asserts the observation. This is stronger and more specific than the support link. For example, a growth of Staphylococcus aureus may be considered the cause of an abscess. The source (cause) is typically an observation, but may be any service, while the target must be an observation.

References

This value set is not used here; it may be used elsewhere (e.g. specifications and/or implementations that use this content)

Logical Definition (CLD)

Generated Narrative: ValueSet v3-ActRelationshipIsEtiologyFor

Language: en

 

Expansion

Generated Narrative: ValueSet

Language: en

Expansion based on codesystem ActRelationshipType v4.0.0 (CodeSystem)

This value set contains 1 concepts

CodeSystemDisplayDefinition
  CAUShttp://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem/v3-ActRelationshipTypeis etiology for

Description: An assertion that an act was the cause of another act.This is stronger and more specific than the support link. The source (cause) is typically an observation, but may be any act, while the target may be any act.

Examples:

  • a growth of Staphylococcus aureus may be considered the cause of an abscess
  • contamination of the infusion bag was deemed to be the cause of the infection that the patient experienced
  • lack of staff on the shift was deemed to be a supporting factor (proximal factor) causing the patient safety incident where the patient fell out of bed because the bed-sides had not been put up which caused the night patient to fall out of bed

Explanation of the columns that may appear on this page:

Level A few code lists that FHIR defines are hierarchical - each code is assigned a level. In this scheme, some codes are under other codes, and imply that the code they are under also applies
System The source of the definition of the code (when the value set draws in codes defined elsewhere)
Code The code (used as the code in the resource instance)
Display The display (used in the display element of a Coding). If there is no display, implementers should not simply display the code, but map the concept into their application
Definition An explanation of the meaning of the concept
Comments Additional notes about how to use the code

History

DateActionCustodianAuthorComment
2023-11-14reviseTSMGMarc DuteauAdd standard copyright and contact to internal content; up-476
2022-10-18reviseTSMGMarc DuteauFixing missing metadata; up-349
2020-05-06reviseVocabulary WGTed KleinMigrated to the UTG maintenance environment and publishing tooling.
2014-03-26revise2014T1_2014-03-26_001283 (RIM release ID)Vocabulary (Woody Beeler) (no record of original request)Lock all vaue sets untouched since 2014-03-26 to trackingId 2014T1_2014_03_26