Domain
EHR, ICD-10, LOINC, SNOMED CT, patient care and clinical documentation
16,101 clinical terms
The self-reported or documented racial classification of a patient associated with an acuity record, captured to support health equity analysis and disparity reporting. Used to identify patterns in severity outcomes across demographic groups and to meet regulatory reporting requirements in clinical and population health systems.
The minimum and maximum boundary values defining the acceptable or expected limits for an acuity score or clinical severity metric. Used to classify patients into severity tiers, trigger clinical alerts, and validate acuity measurements against established thresholds in triage and early warning scoring systems.
The per-unit cost or reimbursement rate applied to a specific acuity level, used in hospital billing and payer contracting to calculate charges for severity-tiered services. Also used in population health analytics to express the frequency of acuity events per patient or per defined time period.
A scored value assigned to a patient's condition severity using standardized clinical tools such as APACHE, NEWS, or ESI triage scales. Drives care prioritization, staffing decisions, and resource allocation across inpatient, emergency, and critical care settings.
The proportional relationship between patient acuity levels and available clinical resources, typically nurse-to-patient ratios in inpatient units. Used in staffing models and capacity planning to ensure care delivery aligns with the severity of patient conditions across a facility.
The clinical justification or explanation supporting a patient's assigned acuity level, such as hemodynamic instability, altered mental status, or complex comorbidities. Documented in clinical workflows to validate triage decisions, care escalations, or level-of-care determinations.
The date on which an acuity assessment, referral, or severity-related clinical information was received by the treating facility or care team. Used to measure timeliness of clinical response, track handoff workflows, and support quality reporting in acute and post-acute care settings.
An identifier or pointer linking a patient's acuity record to an external source document, assessment tool, clinical guideline, or prior encounter. Enables cross-referencing of severity data across EHR systems, care episodes, or population health platforms for longitudinal clinical analysis.
The date on which a patient's elevated acuity condition was resolved, stabilized, or downgraded to a lower severity level. Used in clinical documentation and quality reporting to measure episode duration, treatment effectiveness, and care transitions in inpatient and emergency settings.
The recorded respiratory rate or breathing assessment value captured as part of a patient's acuity evaluation. A key vital sign component in early warning scoring systems such as NEWS or MEWS, used to detect clinical deterioration and trigger escalation protocols in acute care environments.
The outcome of a clinical acuity assessment, including the final severity score, triage category, or level-of-care determination assigned to a patient. Informs care planning, bed placement, and resource allocation decisions across emergency, inpatient, and intensive care clinical settings.
A versioned update to a previously documented acuity assessment reflecting changes in a patient's clinical condition, new diagnostic findings, or corrected scoring. Tracks the iteration number of reassessments over an encounter to support clinical audit trails and care escalation documentation.
A clinical risk stratification value derived from acuity assessments, indicating the likelihood of adverse outcomes such as deterioration, readmission, or mortality. Used in predictive models, care management programs, and utilization review to prioritize high-risk patients for intervention.
The care pathway or clinical escalation route associated with a patient's acuity level, such as direct ICU admission, emergency department fast track, or step-down unit placement. Guides care team decisions on appropriate treatment settings based on assessed condition severity.
A composite numerical value calculated from standardized clinical parameters such as vital signs, lab results, and neurological status to quantify patient severity. Used in tools like APACHE II, SOFA, or ESI to guide clinical decision-making, resource allocation, and quality benchmarking.
A sequential ordering number identifying the position of an acuity assessment within a series of evaluations conducted during a patient encounter or care episode. Supports chronological tracking of clinical reassessments and severity changes across shifts or treatment phases.
A categorical or scaled classification of the seriousness of a patient's clinical condition at the time of assessment, ranging from minor to critical. Used in triage protocols, level-of-care determinations, and severity-adjusted quality metrics across emergency, inpatient, and intensive care settings.
The patient's biological sex recorded in conjunction with an acuity assessment, used to apply sex-specific clinical scoring adjustments or reference ranges in severity tools. Supports risk stratification models and population health analytics where sex is a variable in predicting clinical outcomes.
The originating system, clinical tool, care setting, or clinician role from which an acuity assessment was generated, such as triage nurse evaluation, automated early warning system, or transferring facility report. Used to assess data reliability and traceability of severity classifications in clinical records.
The calendar date on which a patient's acuity assessment period or elevated severity condition began. Used to calculate episode duration, track clinical deterioration onset, and support quality measures related to timely recognition and response to changes in patient condition.