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Background

There are many factors that go into determining whether or not an order is valid, including many different context-specific details (what's being ordered, type of order, care setting, orderer) and often incorporating implementation-specific business rules.

Basic Validation

All orders

  • Patient
  • Encounter
  • Care Setting
  • Concept (what is being ordered)
  • Instructions
  • Orderer

Assumed defaults

  • Order ID – assigned by the API
  • Urgency – API assumes ROUTINE
  • Action –API assumes NEW
  • Start date – API assumes date created
  • Creator – API assumes current user
  • Date created – API assumes now

Drug orders

  • Drug (formulation)
  • Dosing type
  • Instructions corresponding to dosing type
    • Simple: dose, dose units, route, frequency
    • Free text: orders.instructions
  • For outpatient care setting: quantity, quantity units, and number of refills (not required for inpatient drug orders)

Other Validation Rules

 

  • Previous order field is required for discontinuation orders
  •  For discontinuation orders, concept and its previous order's concept must be the same
  • The dateStopped of a previous order should be the same as the start date of the revised or discontinued order
  • An order can't have both dataStopped and autoExpireDate
  • Cannot order retired orderables e.g retired drugs or concepts? Problem here when it is retrospective data entry
  • Unit concepts(quantity, duration and dose units) should be of units concept class
  • Frequency concepts should be of frequency concept class

Not sure how all this will work with retrospective data entry of orders

 

 

 

Extensible Validation

Ultimately, implementations will need to be able to introduce their own business rules for order validation.  Some examples of common business rules:

  • Requirements may vary based on the care settings (e.g., outpatient drugs must specify quantity & refills, while inpatient drugs do not)
  • Some specific drugs cannot be refilled
  • Some radiology tests require that laterality be specified, while many others laterality does not apply

Validator Chaining

In order to accommodate implementation-specific business rules that may vary based on context, OpenMRS should implement some basic "out-of-the-box" business rules in a manner that can be adapted by implementations.  A validator chain would invoke 1-to-N order validators, passing the current order along with the ordering context (Encounter, CareSetting, Orderer, User) and collect a list of validation errors that could be passed back to the user.

Other Validation Rules

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