Evidence Based Medicine on FHIR Implementation Guide
2.0.0-ballot - ballot International flag

Evidence Based Medicine on FHIR Implementation Guide, published by HL7 International / Clinical Decision Support. This guide is not an authorized publication; it is the continuous build for version 2.0.0-ballot built by the FHIR (HL7® FHIR® Standard) CI Build. This version is based on the current content of https://github.com/HL7/ebm/ and changes regularly. See the Directory of published versions

Example Group: ConceptualCohortDefinition: BMI ≥ 35 and at least 1 obesity-related comorbidity

Generated Narrative: Group 179376

version: 6; Last updated: 2024-11-16 19:20:56+0000

Profile: ConceptualCohortDefinition

Artifact related artifact: No display for RelatedArtifact (type: cite-as; citation: ConceptualCohortDefinition: BMI ≥ 35 and at least 1 obesity-related comorbidity [Group]. Contributors: Brian S. Alper [Authors/Creators]. In: Fast Evidence Interoperability Resources (FEvIR) Platform, FOI 179376. Revised 2023-12-04. Available at: https://fevir.net/resources/Group/179376. Computable resource at: https://fevir.net/resources/Group/179376.)

Artifact Author: Brian S. Alper:

url: https://fevir.net/resources/Group/179376

identifier: FEvIR Object Identifier/https://fevir.net/FOI/179376

name: ConceptualCohortDefinition_BMI_35_and_at_least_1_obesity_related_comorbidity

title: ConceptualCohortDefinition: BMI ≥ 35 and at least 1 obesity-related comorbidity

status: Active

publisher: Computable Publishing LLC

contact: support@computablepublishing.com

description:

BMI ≥ 35 and at least 1 obesity-related comorbidity

copyright:

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/

membership: Conceptual

combinationMethod: All of

characteristic

code: Body mass index (BMI) [Ratio]

value: >=35 kilogram per square meter (kg/m2) (Details: UCUM codekg/m2 = 'kg/m2')

exclude: false

description:

BMI ≥ 35

characteristic

code: Condition

value: obesity-related comorbidity

exclude: false

description:

at least 1 obesity-related comorbidity