R4 Ballot #2 (Mixed Normative/Trial use)

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4.3.13.364 Code System urn:iso-astm:E1762-95:2013

FHIR Infrastructure Work Group Maturity Level: 0Informative Use Context: Not Intended for Production use

This is a code system defined at http://www.astm.org/ .

Summary

Defining URL:urn:iso-astm:E1762-95:2013
Version:3.5.0
Name:SignatureTypeCodes
Title:Signature Type Codes
Definition:

The Digital Signature Purposes, an indication of the reason an entity signs a document. This is included in the signed information and can be used when determining accountability for various actions concerning the document. Examples include: author, transcriptionist/recorder, and witness.

Committee:FHIR Infrastructure Work Group
OID:2.16.840.1.113883.4.642.1.64 (for OID based terminology systems)
Copyright:These codes are excerpted from ASTM Standard, E1762-95(2013) - Standard Guide for Electronic Authentication of Health Care Information, Copyright by ASTM International, 100 Barr Harbor Drive, West Conshohocken, PA 19428. Copies of this standard are available through the ASTM Web Site at www.astm.org.
Source ResourceXML / JSON

This Code system is used in the following value sets:

  • ValueSet: Signature Type Codes (The Digital Signature Purposes, an indication of the reason an entity signs a document. This is included in the signed information and can be used when determining accountability for various actions concerning the document. Examples include: author, transcriptionist/recorder, and witness.)

The Digital Signature Purposes, an indication of the reason an entity signs a document. This is included in the signed information and can be used when determining accountability for various actions concerning the document. Examples include: author, transcriptionist/recorder, and witness.

Copyright Statement: These codes are excerpted from ASTM Standard, E1762-95(2013) - Standard Guide for Electronic Authentication of Health Care Information, Copyright by ASTM International, 100 Barr Harbor Drive, West Conshohocken, PA 19428. Copies of this standard are available through the ASTM Web Site at www.astm.org.

This code system urn:iso-astm:E1762-95:2013 defines the following codes:

CodeDisplayDefinition
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.1 Author's Signaturethe signature of the primary or sole author of a health information document. There can be only one primary author of a health information document.
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.2 Coauthor's Signaturethe signature of a health information document coauthor. There can be multiple coauthors of a health information document.
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.3 Co-participant's Signaturethe signature of an individual who is a participant in the health information document but is not an author or coauthor. (Example a surgeon who is required by institutional, regulatory, or legal rules to sign an operative report, but who was not involved in the authorship of that report.)
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.4 Transcriptionist/Recorder Signaturethe signature of an individual who has transcribed a dictated document or recorded written text into a digital machine readable format.
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.5 Verification Signaturea signature verifying the information contained in a document. (Example a physician is required to countersign a verbal order that has previously been recorded in the medical record by a registered nurse who has carried out the verbal order.)
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.6 Validation Signaturea signature validating a health information document for inclusion in the patient record. (Example a medical student or resident is credentialed to perform history or physical examinations and to write progress notes. The attending physician signs the history and physical examination to validate the entry for inclusion in the patient's medical record.)
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.7 Consent Signaturethe signature of an individual consenting to what is described in a health information document.
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.8 Signature Witness Signaturethe signature of a witness to any other signature.
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.9 Event Witness Signaturethe signature of a witness to an event. (Example the witness has observed a procedure and is attesting to this fact.)
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.10 Identity Witness Signaturethe signature of an individual who has witnessed another individual who is known to them signing a document. (Example the identity witness is a notary public.)
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.11 Consent Witness Signaturethe signature of an individual who has witnessed the health care provider counselling a patient.
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.12 Interpreter Signaturethe signature of an individual who has translated health care information during an event or the obtaining of consent to a treatment.
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.13 Review Signaturethe signature of a person, device, or algorithm that has reviewed or filtered data for inclusion into the patient record. ( Examples: (1) a medical records clerk who scans a document for inclusion in the medical record, enters header information, or catalogues and classifies the data, or a combination thereof; (2) a gateway that receives data from another computer system and interprets that data or changes its format, or both, before entering it into the patient record.)
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.14 Source Signaturethe signature of an automated data source. (Examples: (1) the signature for an image that is generated by a device for inclusion in the patient record; (2) the signature for an ECG derived by an ECG system for inclusion in the patient record; (3) the data from a biomedical monitoring device or system that is for inclusion in the patient record.)
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.15 Addendum Signaturethe signature on a new amended document of an individual who has corrected, edited, or amended an original health information document. An addendum signature can either be a signature type or a signature sub-type (see 8.1). Any document with an addendum signature shall have a companion document that is the original document with its original, unaltered content, and original signatures. The original document shall be referenced via an attribute in the new document, which contains, for example, the digest of the old document. Whether the original, unaltered, document is always displayed with the addended document is a local matter, but the original, unaltered, document must remain as part of the patient record and be retrievable on demand.
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.16 Modification Signaturethe signature on an original document of an individual who has generated a new amended document. This (original) document shall reference the new document via an additional signature purpose. This is the inverse of an addendum signature and provides a pointer from the original to the amended document.
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.17 Administrative (Error/Edit) Signaturethe signature of an individual who is certifying that the document is invalidated by an error(s), or is placed in the wrong chart. An administrative (error/edit) signature must include an addendum to the document and therefore shall have an addendum signature sub-type (see 8.1). This signature is reserved for the highest health information system administrative classification, since it is a statement that the entire document is invalidated by the error and that the document should no longer be used for patient care, although for legal reasons the document must remain part of the permanent patient record.
1.2.840.10065.1.12.1.18 Timestamp Signaturethe signature by an entity or device trusted to provide accurate timestamps. This timestamp might be provided, for example, in the signature time attribute.

 

See the full registry of code systems defined as part of FHIR.


Explanation of the columns that may appear on this page:

LvlA few code lists that FHIR defines are hierarchical - each code is assigned a level. See Code System for further information.
SourceThe source of the definition of the code (when the value set draws in codes defined elsewhere)
CodeThe code (used as the code in the resource instance). If the code is in italics, this indicates that the code is not selectable ('Abstract')
DisplayThe 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
DefinitionAn explanation of the meaning of the concept
CommentsAdditional notes about how to use the code