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Concept creation
Since OpenMRS 1.7, duplicate concept names are not allowed for the same locale. Validation checks for this and will prevent addition of new duplicates or saving a concept with a duplicate name. It is still possible to have duplicate names for different locales (ie. Leprosy could be the concept name for 'en' and 'gb' locale).
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When creating a new concept, use the "similar concepts" resources and/or search your dictionary carefully to be certain that there is not already a concept that meets your needs.
Create synonyms when you create a concept, to avoid re-creating a duplicate of that concept in the future. This helps avoid duplicate concepts with different phrasings.
Concept Naming
Only use alphanumeric characters (letters and numbers) and simple punctuation sparingly – e.g., comma (","), parentheses ("(" and ")"), and forward slash ("/").
Descriptions may contain non-alphanumeric characters
Sentence-case is recommended. This is either all lowercase or uppercase first letter (ie. 'Blue suede shoes').
Avoid using all uppercase.
Make exceptions for well known names (ie. EKG, HIV, pH)
For drug names, some people use Tall Man Lettering to uppercase certain parts of drug names that are confused by providers, since this has been proven to reduce medication errors.
Be consistent. Having a consistent naming convention for concepts is a must.
Add standard SNOMED, ICD10, or RxNORM maps to concepts. Do this as part of creating the concept.
Consistency in naming helps users predict concept names and makes the dictionary much easier to manage.
Always work with your end users to ensure the your concept names make sense to them and match their workflows.
Avoid changing names of concepts that have been used to store clinical data. After the point of data collection, concepts shouldn't be changed as you're then altering retrospective data. It is fine to continue to add synonyms to concepts, where applicable.
Describing Concepts
Every concept should have a description (at least within the system locale) that unambiguously describes the concept and, ideally, explains how it is intended to be used. For example, for a concept like "NUMBER OF CHILDREN", the description could clarify the concept with a statement like "A question asked of the patient and representing the number of their biological children, whether or not the children are alive, living at home, or living elsewhere."
Classes and datatypes
Don't create boolean concepts for things like "Cough for last 3 weeks" = Yes/No. Instead have Symptom Present (coded), Symptom Absent (coded), and "Cough for last 3 weeks" (as an answer)
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Consider importing concepts (e.g. from CIEL/MVP) when suitable <https://
Design for Re-use
Well-designed concepts can be used in several different contexts (e.g., multiple, different forms).
Avoid making your symptoms & diagnoses concepts boolean; rather, use datatype N/A for these and use them as answers (not questions). This promotes re-use of these concepts.
POOR DESIGN: a boolean "HIV" concept answered yes/no based on whether or not the patient has HIV.
GOOD DESIGN: a coded "DIAGNOSES" or "PROBLEM ADDED" concept that is answered with the concept HIV (the HIV concept has datatype N/A)
Modeling diagnoses
Here are some notes/conversations related to concept modeling that may be helpful resources when confronting modeling issues.
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CON
requires search for multiple concepts (could be facilitated by concept_set)
Additional information
The MVP-CIEL concept dictionary is a valuable resource (either as a starting dictionary or to look for best practices)
Handling Missing Information is a guide for designing better forms and concepts so as to avoid missing information.
Notes or recording from the 2012-Sep-12 OpenMRS University forum, where concept management experts discussed best practices.