Domain
Operations
Scheduling, facilities, departments, workflows, and staff
6,391 operations terms
A classification code or category identifying the nature of a billable charge in healthcare systems, such as professional, facility, pharmacy, ancillary, or capitation. Used in EHR, hospital billing, and claims platforms to route charges to appropriate billing workflows, fee schedules, and payer-specific adjudication rules.
The unit of measure applied to a billable service charge in healthcare billing systems, such as per diem, per visit, per procedure, or per milligram for pharmacy charges. Used in EHR charge masters and claims systems to define the basis for charge rate multiplication and accurate billing quantity reporting.
The most recent date on which a charge record was modified, corrected, or reprocessed in the revenue cycle system. Used to track the currency of charge data, support audit trail requirements, and identify recently altered charges requiring compliance review or rebilling.
The clinical or operational priority level assigned to a billable service at the time of charge capture, such as routine, urgent, or emergent. Used in revenue cycle workflows to prioritize charge processing, support medical necessity documentation, and apply appropriate billing modifiers for expedited services.
The specific monetary or numeric data point associated with a charge record in healthcare billing systems, representing the billed amount, allowed amount, or calculated fee for a service. Used in EHR, claims, and revenue cycle analytics platforms to support financial reporting, variance analysis, and payer contract performance evaluation.
The sequential version number assigned to a charge record to track its lifecycle through creation, modification, and finalization in the revenue cycle system. Enables auditability of charge changes over time, supporting compliance reviews and dispute resolution in clinical billing environments.
The postal ZIP code associated with the location where a healthcare service charge was incurred. Used in claims processing and revenue cycle management to route billing, validate service area, and support geographic analysis of charges across facilities.
The full mailing or physical address recorded on a patient's medical chart, typically reflecting the patient's residence or contact location at the time of documentation. Used in care coordination, correspondence, and demographic verification within clinical records management.
Indicates the current review and sign-off state of a patient medical chart, such as pending, approved, or rejected. Used in clinical documentation workflows to enforce completion requirements, support compliance audits, and ensure provider attestation before chart finalization or billing.
The gross billed dollar amount associated with services documented on a patient's medical chart. Captured during charge entry in the revenue cycle to reflect the cost of clinical encounters before contractual adjustments, insurance payments, or patient liability calculations are applied.
The date on which the clinical information recorded in a patient's medical chart becomes active or applicable. Used in longitudinal patient records to establish the valid start date for documented diagnoses, treatments, or care plans within a given episode of care.
The unique patient identifier assigned by a healthcare facility and linked to a specific medical chart. Serves as the primary key for locating, matching, and tracking all clinical documentation associated with a patient across departments, visits, and care settings within the facility.
The calendar date on which a patient encounter, procedure, or clinical review associated with a medical chart is scheduled to occur. Used in appointment management and clinical operations to coordinate care delivery, staff resources, and pre-visit documentation preparation.
The specific time of day at which a patient encounter or clinical activity associated with a medical chart is planned to begin. Used alongside the scheduled date in appointment scheduling systems to manage clinical workflow, reduce patient wait times, and optimize provider capacity.
The street-level component of the address recorded on a patient's medical chart, including house number and street name. Used in patient demographic records to support mailing, care coordination, eligibility verification, and geographic population health reporting.
The clinical unit, ward, or department within a facility to which a patient's medical chart is assigned or associated during a care episode. Used in hospital information systems to route documentation, assign clinical staff accountability, and support unit-level reporting and quality monitoring.
A computed hash value used to detect changes in a healthcare data record between source system extracts. Compared against the stored checksum to identify updated records without scanning all columns. Used in Data Vault satellite tables and CDC-based ETL pipelines to efficiently track record changes.
The mailing or physical address associated with a patient or ordering entity linked to a clinical chemistry laboratory order or result. Used in lab information systems to direct specimen collection logistics, result reporting, and correspondence related to chemistry panel workflows.
Indicates the review and authorization state of a clinical chemistry test order or result, such as pending review, verified, or rejected. Used in laboratory information systems to enforce result validation protocols, support clinician sign-off, and ensure quality control before results are released to care teams.
The billed dollar amount for clinical chemistry laboratory tests performed on a patient specimen. Captured in revenue cycle and lab billing systems to reflect the cost of chemical analyses such as metabolic panels, lipid profiles, or enzyme assays prior to payer adjudication or patient billing.