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Guideline execution engine
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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A guideline execution engine is a computer program which can interpret a clinical guideline represented in a computerized format and perform actions towards the user of an electronic medical record.
A guideline execution engine needs to communicate with a host clinical information system. Virtual Medical Record (vMR) is one possible interface which can be used.
The engine's main function is to manage instances of executed guidelines of individual patients.
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Architecture
The following modules are generally needed for any engine:
- interface to clinical information system
- new guidelines loading module
- guideline interpreter module
- clinical events parser
- alert/recommendations dispatch
Guideline Interchange Format
The Guideline Interchange Format (GLIF) is a computer representation format for clinical guidelines.[1] Represented guidelines can be executed using a guideline execution engine.
The format has several versions as it has been improved. In 2003 GLIF3 was introduced.
Use of third party workflow engine as a guideline execution engine
Some commercial electronic health record systems use a workflow engine to execute clinical guidelines. RetroGuide[2] and HealthFlow[3] are examples of such an approach.
See also
References
Further reading
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