Clinical Laboratory Sciences Data Transmission: The NPU Coding System

In health care services, technology requires that correct information be duly available to professionals, citizens and authorities, worldwide. Thus, clinical laboratory sciences require standardized electronic exchanges for results of laboratory examinations. The NPU (Nomenclature, Properties and Units) coding system provides a terminology for identification of result values (property values). It is structured according to BIPM, ISO, IUPAC and IFCC recommendations. It uses standard terms for established concepts and structured definitions describing: which part of the universe is examined, which component of relevance in that part, which kind-of-property is relevant. Unit and specifications can be added where relevant [System(spec)-Component(spec); kind-of-property(spec) = ? unit]. The English version of this terminology is freely accessible at http://dior.imt.liu.se/cnpu/ and http://www.labterm.dk, directly or through the IFCC and IUPAC websites. It has been nationally used for more than 10 years in Denmark and Sweden and has been translated into 6 other languages. The NPU coding system provides a terminology for dedicated kinds-of-property following the international recommendations. It fits well in the health network and is freely accessible. Clinical laboratory professionals worldwide will find many advantages in using the NPU coding system, notably with regards to an accreditation process.

[1]  Anders Kallner,et al.  The impact of qualitative analysis in laboratory medicine , 2005 .

[2]  eiko Bundo,et al.  Properties and units in the clinical laboratory sciences-I. Syntax and semantic rules (IUPAC-IFCC Recommendations 1995) , 1996, Clinica chimica acta; international journal of clinical chemistry.

[3]  René Dybkaer Description of chemical systems by their properties , 2008 .

[4]  M. Nordberg,et al.  Properties and units in the clinical laboratory sciences Part XX. Properties and units in clinical and environmental human toxicology (IUPAC Technical Report) , 2007 .

[5]  Henrik Olesen,et al.  Properties and units in the clinical laboratory sciences: Part XI. Coding systems - structure and guidelines (Technical Report) , 1997 .

[6]  G GordilloPaniagua,et al.  The international system of units , 1964 .

[7]  S. Bojesen,et al.  Properties and units in the clinical laboratory sciences. Part XVIII. Properties and units in clinical molecular biology (IUPAC Technical Report) , 2004 .

[8]  D Kenny,et al.  Properties and units in the clinical laboratory sciences II. Kinds-of-property (IUPAC Recommendations 1997) , 1997 .

[9]  Peter B. Herdson Le Systeme International D'unites , 1988 .

[10]  René Dybkaer,et al.  An ontology on property for physical, chemical, and biological systems. , 2004, APMIS. Supplementum.

[11]  Daniel Karlsson,et al.  Terminology, categories and representation of examinations in laboratory medicine , 2005, Clinical chemistry and laboratory medicine.

[12]  D. Kenny,et al.  Properties and units in the clinical laboratory sciences II. Kinds-of-property (IUPAC Recommendations 1997) , 1997 .