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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38797373

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: After the publication of the new standardized nomenclature for the specialty of Otorhinolaryngology in 2021, a joint adaptation was carried out with the Spanish Society of Anesthesiology, Resuscitation and Pain Therapy (SEDAR), creating an executive version. In this version, the Anesthesia groups are added for those procedures that require it and, in addition, the number of acts is reduced to facilitate its implementation in the daily basis healthcare activity. The aim of this article is to update the definitive executive version of the nomenclature for the specialty of Otolaryngology. METHODS: The nomenclature published in 2021 was updated, reducing the number of acts and procedures. For this purpose, a grouping of procedures similar in description and in order and ranking has been made. Those procedures that have been grouped together have received a new description that reflects all the acts included in order to facilitate its coding but respecting the essence of the proposal of the complete version of the 2021 nomenclature. Subsequently, the private medicine committee of SEDAR has assigned the anaesthetic act for those procedures that may require it. In addition, a provisional code has been assigned for those acts that are new with respect to the latest version approved by the OMC, which allows their numerical identification. RESULTS: The executive version of the nomenclature presents a total of 234 medical acts, compared to 395 listed in the 2021 version, which are distributed by OMC classification groups and ENT subspecialties. One-hundred and fourteen procedures maintain the original OMC code, with some modifications in the description of the medical act. Other procedures also performed by ENT but listed elsewhere were kept with their same description and group and assigned OMC codes. The remaining 120 procedures are new proposals made by the scientific society and its subspecialty committees. CONCLUSIONS: The executive version of the new nomenclature of Otorhinolaryngology proposed by the SEORL-CCC and SEDAR updates the one from 2021 and is the only one valid in our specialty for its use in the private healthcare daily practice. The reduction of medical procedures, without losing richness or modifications of the surgical groups, and the allocation of the anesthesia scales, facilitates its implementation, and provides the highest standards of quality and clinical timelines.

2.
Neurocirugía (Soc. Luso-Esp. Neurocir.) ; 35(2): 95-112, Mar-Abr. 2024. tab
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-231280

ABSTRACT

Objetivos: Actualizar el nomenclátor de actos médicos de la especialidad de Neurocirugía, eliminando actos en desuso y añadiendo las nuevas técnicas quirúrgicas desarrolladas en los últimos años, para que se adapte fielmente a la práctica médica habitual de nuestra especialidad, así como establecer los principios generales y definir los criterios de baremación, indicadores cuantitativos y escalas de valoración. Material y método: La elaboración del nuevo nomenclátor se dividió en 3 fases: 1) identificación y selección de los actos médicos, 2) establecimiento del grado de dificultad de cada uno de ellos basado en la experiencia y el tiempo necesarios para su realización, así como el porcentaje y gravedad de las posibles complicaciones y 3) consenso con los miembros de la SENEC mediante su envío individualizado, realizando los retoques necesarios y posterior aprobación en asamblea de la especialidad. Resultados: El nuevo nomenclátor cuenta con 255 actos médicos agrupados en 4 grupos: consultas y visitas, actos terapéuticos, procedimientos diagnósticos e intervenciones quirúrgicas. Se han eliminado 42 procedimientos recogidos en el nomenclátor de la OMC por obsoletos, no ser propios de la especialidad o resultar demasiado vagos. Se han introducido nuevas técnicas y se han definido de forma más precisa los actos médicos. Conclusiones: Este nomenclátor proporciona una terminología actualizada y servirá para ofertar la cartera de servicios, medir y conocer el valor relativo de nuestra actividad y de los costes aproximados de los procedimientos, y adicionalmente, para realizar estudios comparativos longitudinales. Debe constituir una herramienta para mejorar la atención de los pacientes y minimizar la variabilidad geográfica en todos los ámbitos asistenciales.(AU)


Purpose: Update the list of medical acts in the specialty of neurosurgery, eliminating obsolete acts and adding the new surgical techniques developed in recent years, so that they are faithfully adapted to the usual medical practice of our specialty, as well as establishing the general principles and defining the grading criteria, quantitative indicators and assessment scales. Material and method: The elaboration of the new nomenclator was divided into three phases: (1) identification and selection of medical acts, (2) establishment of the degree of difficulty of each of them based on the experience and the time necessary for their completion, as well as the percentage and severity of the possible complications and (3) consensus with the members of the SENEC through their individualized submission, making the necessary adjustments and subsequent approval in the general assembly of SENEC. Results: The new nomenclator has 255 medical acts grouped into four groups: consultations and visits, therapeutic acts, diagnostic procedures and surgical interventions. Forty-two procedures included in the OMC nomenclator have been eliminated due to being obsolete, not related to the specialty or being too vague. New techniques have been included and medical acts have been more precisely defined. Conclusions: This nomenclator provides up-to-date terminology and will serve to offer the portfolio of services, measure and know the relative value of our activity and the approximate costs of the procedures, and additionally, to carry out longitudinal comparative studies. It should be a tool to improve patient care and minimize geographic variability in all healthcare settings.(AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Neurosurgery , Neurosurgical Procedures , Terminology as Topic
3.
Neurocirugia (Astur : Engl Ed) ; 35(2): 95-112, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38295899

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Update the list of medical acts in the specialty of Neurosurgery, eliminating obsolete acts and adding the new surgical techniques developed in recent years, so that they are faithfully adapted to the usual medical practice of our specialty, as well as establishing the general principles and defining the grading criteria, quantitative indicators and assessment scales. METHODS: The elaboration of the new nomenclator was divided into 3 phases: 1) identification and selection of medical acts, 2) establishment of the degree of difficulty of each of them based on the experience and the time necessary for their completion, as well as the percentage and severity of the possible complications and 3) consensus with the members of the SENEC through their individualized submission, making the necessary adjustments and subsequent approval in the general assembly of SENEC. RESULTS: The new nomenclator has 255 medical acts grouped into 4 groups: consultations and visits, therapeutic acts, diagnostic procedures and surgical interventions. 42 procedures included in the OMC nomenclator have been eliminated due to being obsolete, not related to the specialty or being too vague. New techniques have been included and medical acts have been more precisely defined. CONCLUSIONS: This nomenclator provides up-to-date terminology and will serve to offer the portfolio of services, measure and know the relative value of our activity and the approximate costs of the procedures, and additionally, to carry out longitudinal comparative studies. It should be a tool to improve patient care and minimise geographic variability in all healthcare settings.


Subject(s)
Neurosurgery , Humans , Neurosurgical Procedures , Consensus
4.
Article in English, Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34092361

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: At the request of the Organización Médica Colegial, we have elaborated a new nomenclature of medical and surgical procedures in Otorhinolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery (ENT-HNS) based on the International Classification of Diseases ICD-9-MC. We have defined new quantitative and qualitative criteria and indicators that may allow scale and remuneration to be determined in private medical practice. METHODS: Obsolete processes were eliminated from the current list of nomenclature, new ones were added or updated, procedures from other specialties that typically belong to ENT-HNS were imported, descriptions were modified accordingly, and others were transferred from one group to another for reasons of surgical complexity. In addition, it was requested that four quantitative criteria and indicators should be assigned for each procedure: unit cost per group, professional training and complexity, professional responsibility, potential complications, and health value, assigning a final value as a product of the sum of each of the indicators. RESULTS: The new scale presents a total of 395 procedures, compared to 150 in the previous list, an increase of 163%. Surgical procedures increased from 113 to 313 (177%). By subspecialty, Laryngology (213%) has the greatest number of new procedures followed by Rhinology (141%) and Otology (82%). Twenty of 150 procedures were found to be outdated and were therefore removed from the list. Eighty-seven per cent of the procedures remained on the list, 40% as they were and 47% modified, respectively, and, in all cases retaining their original Organización Médica Colegial code. CONCLUSIONS: The new ENT-HNS nomenclature proposed by the SEORL-CCC updates and improves the previous outdated scale, adapting the current procedures to the ICD-9-CM and incorporating the new techniques developed. The updated scale establishes new evaluation criteria with quantitative and qualitative indicators to optimize the calculation of the value of a medical or surgical procedure that, eventually, will allow an assessment of its monetary value in our specialty.

5.
Arch Soc Esp Oftalmol (Engl Ed) ; 95(12): 591-602, 2020 Dec.
Article in English, Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32948371

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To create a new list of medical procedures in ophthalmology based on the International Classification of Diseases ICD-9-CM. To establish the general principles that define criteria, quantitative indicators, and scales. To develop the algorithms needed to calculate fees for medical procedures. METHODS: The out-of-date processes were removed from the list, and new techniques were added, descriptors were modified, procedures with similar descriptions were grouped together, and others were relocated to other group according to surgical complexity conditions. The criteria to calculate the medical fees were defined: training and complexity (U), proficient responsibility (R), and health value (V), with their respective quantitative indicators: period of training necessary to master a technique, frequency of complications that worsen the preoperative situation, and days of incapacity for work due to the process. The Relative Value Unit (RVU) was defined as the score sum of R, V and U. The final fee per medical procedure was calculated as the product of the RVU by its unit cost and by the weighting coefficient (WC). RESULTS: A new catalogue was prepared with 161 medical procedures, grouped into consultations, diagnostic procedures (DX.PR), therapeutic procedures (TX.PR), and surgical interventions, increasing in complexity from group 0 to group 8. The following characters were described for each one of the procedures: OMC and ICD-9-MC code, descriptor term, group, proposed modification: no changes or minimums in the descriptors, grouping of acts by similar definitions, change of origin group, new procedures, and procedures removed. The indicators for assessment were also scored: U between 1-4 points, and R and V between 0-3 points. Using their sum, the number of RVUs per medical procedure (between 1 and 10) was calculated which, together with the unit cost of the RVU and the WC (between 0.05 and 1), will determine the final rate. CONCLUSIONS: The new standardised ophthalmological nomenclature updates and improves the old classification, adapting the procedures to the descriptors included in the ICD-9-CM, and incorporating all the new techniques. Additionally, the declaration of the general principles allows defining new criteria, quantitative indicators, rating scales, and algorithms to calculate fees for medical procedures.

6.
PhytoKeys ; (90): 1-87, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29391851

ABSTRACT

All published names of Croton from Madagascar, the Comoros, and the Mascarenes are treated here. We indicate which names are currently accepted (123 native species and 1 introduced), which ones we consider to be heterotypic synonyms (188), which ones are doubtful (25), and which ones should be excluded (5). We newly designate lectotypes for 108 names, and epitypes for C. anisatus Baill., C. nobilis Baill., and C. submetallicus Baill. A total of 133 names are newly treated as synonyms. One new combination is made, Croton basaltorum (Leandri) P.E.Berry for C. antanosiensis var. basaltorum Leandri, and one new name is proposed, Croton toliarensis B.W.vanEe & Kainul. for C. tranomarensis var. rosmarinifolius Radcl.-Sm.

7.
Zookeys ; (550): 135-52, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26877656

ABSTRACT

Flies make up more than 10% of the planetary biota and our well-being depends on how we manage our coexistence with flies. Storing and accessing relevant knowledge about flies is intimately connected with using correct names, and Systema Dipterorum provides a single authoritative classification for flies developed by consensus among contributors. The 160,000 species of flies currently known are distributed among 160 recent families and some 12,000 genera, which with their synonyms encompass a total of more than a quarter of a million names. These names and their associated classification are shared with relevant global solutions. Sherborn appears to have done remarkably well indexing Diptera names with an overall error rate estimated to be close to 1%.

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