Domain
Clinical
EHR, ICD-10, LOINC, SNOMED CT, patient care and clinical documentation
16,101 clinical terms
The precise time at which a patient's acuity assessment was initiated or an elevated severity condition was first identified. Used alongside acuity start date to calculate time-to-treatment intervals, measure clinical response times, and support emergency and acute care quality reporting.
The geographic state or province associated with the location where a patient's acuity assessment was conducted or where the treating facility is located. Used in regulatory reporting, licensure tracking, and multi-state health system analytics to attribute severity data to the correct jurisdiction.
The current operational state of a patient's acuity assessment record, such as active, pending review, resolved, or closed. Indicates whether the clinical severity condition is ongoing or has been addressed, supporting real-time care management workflows and longitudinal clinical documentation accuracy.
The medication concentration or dosage strength associated with a patient's condition severity level. Used in clinical acuity scoring systems to document drug potency relative to patient acuity, supporting care intensity decisions and treatment protocol alignment in inpatient and critical care settings.
The partial sum of scored components within a condition severity assessment, representing an intermediate calculation before final acuity scoring is complete. Used in clinical data systems to track subsection totals across multi-domain acuity tools such as APACHE, SOFA, or NEWS scoring instruments.
The calendar date on which a surgical procedure was performed in relation to a patient's acuity assessment. Used in clinical documentation to correlate operative interventions with condition severity scores, supporting post-surgical acuity tracking and care intensity classification in inpatient records.
The desired clinical benchmark or goal value associated with a patient's condition severity level, such as a target acuity score or care intensity threshold. Used in care management systems to guide clinical decision-making, resource allocation, and patient placement aligned with acuity-based staffing models.
The standardized classification code used to categorize a patient's condition severity within an acuity scoring framework. Used in clinical data systems to organize and cross-reference acuity assessments against structured coding taxonomies, supporting reporting, benchmarking, and care intensity comparisons across patient populations.
The recorded body temperature measurement captured as part of a patient's condition severity assessment. Used in clinical acuity scoring systems such as SIRS criteria or early warning scores where temperature is a key vital sign input for determining patient acuity level and triggering clinical escalation protocols.
The date on which a patient's acuity classification or severity assessment period formally ended, such as upon discharge, care transition, or reclassification. Used in clinical data systems to define the active duration of an acuity record and support longitudinal tracking of condition severity over an episode of care.
The specific time of day at which a patient's condition severity assessment was performed or recorded. Used in clinical documentation to establish precise timing of acuity evaluations, supporting time-sensitive clinical workflows, shift handoffs, and audit trails within inpatient and emergency care settings.
The combined date and time value at which a patient's condition severity assessment was captured or last modified in the clinical system. Used to establish an auditable chronological record of acuity evaluations, supporting clinical decision timelines, regulatory compliance, and retrospective analysis of patient condition progression.
The formal label or descriptive name assigned to a patient's condition severity level or acuity classification tier. Used in clinical data systems to provide a human-readable designation for acuity categories such as critical, high, moderate, or low, supporting consistent communication across care teams and documentation workflows.
The aggregate numeric score representing the overall severity of a patient's condition, calculated by summing all component scores within a structured acuity assessment tool. Used in clinical settings to determine care intensity, staffing requirements, and patient placement decisions across inpatient, ICU, and emergency care environments.
The cumulative number of acuity assessments or scored severity events recorded for a patient or population within a defined period. Used in clinical analytics and staffing systems to quantify assessment frequency, monitor care intensity trends, and support workload analysis across nursing units or care settings.
The classification category that identifies the kind of acuity assessment applied to a patient, such as nursing acuity, clinical acuity, or disease-specific severity scoring. Used in clinical data systems to differentiate between multiple acuity frameworks in use across care settings, enabling accurate interpretation and comparison of severity scores.
The most recent date on which a patient's condition severity assessment record was modified or reassessed. Used in clinical data systems to track when acuity classifications were last reviewed or changed, supporting accurate care planning, staffing adjustments, and audit trail maintenance across inpatient and ambulatory care settings.
The time-sensitivity rating associated with a patient's condition severity, indicating how quickly clinical intervention is required. Used in triage systems, emergency department workflows, and inpatient escalation protocols to prioritize care delivery based on the immediacy of the patient's clinical need relative to their acuity score.
The iteration number or version identifier of a patient's condition severity assessment record, used to distinguish successive updates to the same acuity evaluation. Used in clinical data systems to maintain a versioned history of acuity scores, supporting audit trails, clinical review, and longitudinal tracking of condition severity changes over time.
The postal ZIP code associated with a patient's location at the time of an acuity assessment, typically representing the patient's residential or care facility address. Used in population health and clinical analytics to correlate condition severity levels with geographic factors, supporting regional care planning and health disparity analyses.