WHO FHIR Implementation Guide (IG): Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) in emergencies
0.1.0 - release International flag

WHO FHIR Implementation Guide (IG): Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) in emergencies, published by World Health Organization (WHO). This guide is not an authorized publication; it is the continuous build for version 0.1.0 built by the FHIR (HL7® FHIR® Standard) CI Build. This version is based on the current content of https://github.com/WorldHealthOrganization/smart-emcare/tree/main and changes regularly. See the Directory of published versions
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Questionnaire: Ccc.B18-21.Symptoms.2m.m

Branch:

Structure
LinkIDTextCardinalityTypeFlagsDescription & Constraintsdoco
.. Ccc.B18-21.Symptoms.2m.mQuestionnairehttps://smart.who.int/ccc/Questionnaire/Ccc.b18-21.symptoms.2m.m#0.1.0
... Convulsing Nownull0..1booleaniconiconiconiconValue Set:
... Ccc.B7.DE03Convulsion(s) in this Illness0..1booleaniconiconValue Set:
.... Ccc.B7.DE03-helpUse words the caregiver understands. For example, the caregiver may know<br /> convulsions as “fits” or “spasms”.<br /> During a convulsion, the young infant’s arms and legs may become stiff. The infant<br /> may stop breathing and become blue. Many times there may only be rhythmic<br /> movements of a part of the body, such as rhythmic twitching of the mouth or<br /> blinking of eyes. The young infant may lose consciousness0..1displayValue Set:
... Ccc.B18S1.DE02Difficulty with Feeding1..1choiceValue Set:
Options: 3 options
.... Ccc.B18S1.DE02-helpAny difficulty mentioned by the mother is important. A newborn that has not been able to feed since birth may be premature or may have<br /> complications such as birth asphyxia. These infants who are either not able to<br /> feed or are not feeding well should be referred urgently to hospital.</p> <p>The caregiver may also mention difficulties such as: her infant feeds too frequently<br /> (or not frequently enough), she does not have enough milk, her nipples are sore,<br /> or she has flat or inverted nipples. You will assess these difficulties later during<br /> breastfeeding assessment. These problems do not mean the infant is not feeding well or not feeding at all.0..1displayValue Set:
.... Ccc.B11S1.DE01-helpA young infant has diarrhoea if the stools have changed from the usual pattern, and are many and watery. This means more water than faecal matter. The normally frequent or semi-solid stools of a breastfed baby are not diarrhoea.<br /> The mother of a breastfed young infant can recognize diarrhoea because the consistency or frequency of the stools is different than normal.0..1displayValue Set:
... Ccc.B21S1.DE06Breastfed1..1booleaniconiconValue Set:
.... Ccc.B21S1.DE06-helpAsk the caregiver if the infant is breastfed. This includes both exclusive breastfeeding or receiving breast milk and other foods/fluids.0..1displayValue Set:
... timestampnull0..1dateTimeiconiconValue Set:

doco Documentation for this format

Options Sets

Answer options for Ccc.B18S1.DE02

  • https://smart.who.int/ccc/CodeSystem/Ccc-custom-codes#Ccc.B18S1.DE03 ("Not Able to Feed At All")
  • https://smart.who.int/ccc/CodeSystem/Ccc-custom-codes#Ccc.B18S1.DE04 ("Not Feeding Well")
  • https://smart.who.int/ccc/CodeSystem/Ccc-custom-codes#Ccc.B18S1.DE05 ("Feeding Well")