Encounter
An interaction between a patient and healthcare provider(s) for the purpose of providing healthcare service(s) or assessing the health status of a patient. If the element is present, it must have either a @value, an @id, or extensions
type Encounter implements Resource {
identifier: [Identifier]
status: String
statusHistory: [EncounterStatusHistory]
class: Coding
classHistory: [EncounterClassHistory]
type: [CodeableConcept]
serviceType: CodeableConcept
priority: CodeableConcept
subject: Reference
episodeOfCare: [Reference]
basedOn: [Reference]
participant: [EncounterParticipant]
appointment: [Reference]
period: Period
length: Duration
reasonCode: [CodeableConcept]
reasonReference: [Reference]
diagnosis: [EncounterDiagnosis]
account: [Reference]
hospitalization: EncounterHospitalization
location: [EncounterLocation]
serviceProvider: Reference
partOf: Reference
text: Narrative
contained: [Resource]
extension: [Extension]
modifierExtension: [Extension]
id: String
meta: Meta
implicitRules: Uri
language: String
}
Fields
Encounter.identifier ● [Identifier] list object
Identifier(s) by which this encounter is known.
Encounter.status ● String scalar
planned | arrived | triaged | in-progress | onleave | finished | cancelled +.
Encounter.statusHistory ● [EncounterStatusHistory] list object
The status history permits the encounter resource to contain the status history without needing to read through the historical versions of the resource, or even have the server store them.
Encounter.class ● Coding object
Concepts representing classification of patient encounter such as ambulatory (outpatient), inpatient, emergency, home health or others due to local variations.
Encounter.classHistory ● [EncounterClassHistory] list object
The class history permits the tracking of the encounters transitions without needing to go through the resource history. This would be used for a case where an admission starts of as an emergency encounter, then transitions into an inpatient scenario. Doing this and not restarting a new encounter ensures that any lab/diagnostic results can more easily follow the patient and not require re-processing and not get lost or cancelled during a kind of discharge from emergency to inpatient.
Encounter.type ● [CodeableConcept] list object
Specific type of encounter (e.g. e-mail consultation, surgical day-care, skilled nursing, rehabilitation).
Encounter.serviceType ● CodeableConcept object
Broad categorization of the service that is to be provided (e.g. cardiology).
Encounter.priority ● CodeableConcept object
Indicates the urgency of the encounter.
Encounter.subject ● Reference object
The patient or group present at the encounter.
Encounter.episodeOfCare ● [Reference] list object
Where a specific encounter should be classified as a part of a specific episode(s) of care this field should be used. This association can facilitate grouping of related encounters together for a specific purpose, such as government reporting, issue tracking, association via a common problem. The association is recorded on the encounter as these are typically created after the episode of care and grouped on entry rather than editing the episode of care to append another encounter to it (the episode of care could span years).
Encounter.basedOn ● [Reference] list object
The request this encounter satisfies (e.g. incoming referral or procedure request).
Encounter.participant ● [EncounterParticipant] list object
The list of people responsible for providing the service.
Encounter.appointment ● [Reference] list object
The appointment that scheduled this encounter.
Encounter.period ● Period object
The start and end time of the encounter.
Encounter.length ● Duration object
Quantity of time the encounter lasted. This excludes the time during leaves of absence.
Encounter.reasonCode ● [CodeableConcept] list object
Reason the encounter takes place, expressed as a code. For admissions, this can be used for a coded admission diagnosis.
Encounter.reasonReference ● [Reference] list object
Reason the encounter takes place, expressed as a code. For admissions, this can be used for a coded admission diagnosis.
Encounter.diagnosis ● [EncounterDiagnosis] list object
The list of diagnosis relevant to this encounter.
Encounter.account ● [Reference] list object
The set of accounts that may be used for billing for this Encounter.
Encounter.hospitalization ● EncounterHospitalization object
Details about the admission to a healthcare service.
Encounter.location ● [EncounterLocation] list object
List of locations where the patient has been during this encounter.
Encounter.serviceProvider ● Reference object
The organization that is primarily responsible for this Encounter s services. This MAY be the same as the organization on the Patient record, however it could be different, such as if the actor performing the services was from an external organization (which may be billed seperately) for an external consultation. Refer to the example bundle showing an abbreviated set of Encounters for a colonoscopy.
Encounter.partOf ● Reference object
Another Encounter of which this encounter is a part of (administratively or in time).
Encounter.text ● Narrative object
A human-readable narrative that contains a summary of the resource and can be used to represent the content of the resource to a human. The narrative need not encode all the structured data, but is required to contain sufficient detail to make it clinically safe for a human to just read the narrative. Resource definitions may define what content should be represented in the narrative to ensure clinical safety.
Encounter.contained ● [Resource] list interface
These resources do not have an independent existence apart from the resource that contains them - they cannot be identified independently, and nor can they have their own independent transaction scope.
Encounter.extension ● [Extension] list object
May be used to represent additional information that is not part of the basic definition of the resource. To make the use of extensions safe and manageable, there is a strict set of governance applied to the definition and use of extensions. Though any implementer can define an extension, there is a set of requirements that SHALL be met as part of the definition of the extension.
Encounter.modifierExtension ● [Extension] list object
May be used to represent additional information that is not part of the basic definition of the resource and that modifies the understanding of the element that contains it and/or the understanding of the containing element s descendants. Usually modifier elements provide negation or qualification. To make the use of extensions safe and manageable, there is a strict set of governance applied to the definition and use of extensions. Though any implementer is allowed to define an extension, there is a set of requirements that SHALL be met as part of the definition of the extension. Applications processing a resource are required to check for modifier extensions. Modifier extensions SHALL NOT change the meaning of any elements on Resource or DomainResource (including cannot change the meaning of modifierExtension itself).
Encounter.id ● String scalar
The logical id of the resource, as used in the URL for the resource. Once assigned, this value never changes.
Encounter.meta ● Meta object
The metadata about the resource. This is content that is maintained by the infrastructure. Changes to the content might not always be associated with version changes to the resource.
Encounter.implicitRules ● Uri scalar
A reference to a set of rules that were followed when the resource was constructed, and which must be understood when processing the content. Often, this is a reference to an implementation guide that defines the special rules along with other profiles etc.
Encounter.language ● String scalar
The base language in which the resource is written.
Interfaces
Resource interface
This is the base resource type for everything.
Returned By
Encounter query ● EncounterCreate mutation ● EncounterList query ● EncounterUpdate mutation