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AAHomecare:
See the American Association for Homecare.
Accredited Standards
Committee (ASC): An organization
that has been accredited by ANSI for the development of American
National Standards.
ACG:
Ambulatory Care Group.
ACH:
See Automated Clearinghouse.
ADA:
See the American Dental Association.
ADG:
Ambulatory Diagnostic Group.
Administrative
Code Sets: Code sets
that characterize a general business situation, rather than a medical
condition or service. Under HIPAA, these are sometimes referred to as
non-clinical or non-medical code sets. Compare to medical
code sets.
Administrative
Services Only (ASO): An
arrangement whereby a self-insured entity contracts with a Third Party
Administrator (TPA) to administer a health plan.
Administrative
Simplification (A/S): Title II,
Subtitle F, of HIPAA, which gives HHS the authority to mandate the use of
standards for the electronic exchange of health care data; to
specify what medical and administrative code sets should be
used within those standards; to require the use of national
identification systems for health care patients, providers, payers (or
plans), and employers (or sponsors); and to specify the types of measures
required to protect the security and privacy of personally identifiable
health care information. This is also the name of Title II, Subtitle F,
Part C of HIPAA.
AFEHCT:
See the Association for Electronic
Health Care Transactions.
AHA:
See the American Hospital Association.
AHIMA:
See the American Health Information Management Association.
AMA:
See the American Medical Association.
Ambulatory Payment
Class (APC): A payment type for
outpatient PPS claims.
Amendment:
See Amendments and Corrections.
Amendments and
Corrections: In the final privacy
rule, an amendment to a record would indicate that the data is in dispute
while retaining the original information, while a correction to a record
would alter or replace the original record.
American
Association for Homecare (AAHomecare):
An industry association for the home care industry, including home IV
therapy, home medical services and manufacturers, and home health
providers. AAHomecare was created through the merger of the Health
Industry Distributors Association’s Home Care Division (HIDA Home Care),
the Home Health Services and Staffing Association (HHSSA), and the
National Association for Medical Equipment Services (NAMES).
American Dental
Association (ADA): A professional
organization for dentists. The ADA maintains a hardcopy dental
claim form and the associated claim submission specifications, and also
maintains the Current Dental Terminology (CDTä ) medical code
set. The ADA and the Dental Content Committee (DeCC),
which it hosts, have formal consultative roles under HIPAA.
American Health
Information Management Association (AHIMA):
An association of health information
management professionals. AHIMA sponsors some HIPAA educational
seminars.
American Hospital
Association (AHA): A health care
industry association that represents the concerns of institutional
providers. The AHA hosts the NUBC, which has a formal
consultative role under HIPAA.
American Medical
Association (AMA): A professional
organization for physicians. The AMA is the secretariat of the
NUCC, which has a formal consultative role under HIPAA. The AMA
also maintains the Current Procedural Terminology (CPTä )
medical code set.
American Medical
Informatics Association (AMIA): A
professional organization that promotes the development and use of medical
informatics for patient care, teaching, research, and health care
administration.
American National
Standards (ANS): Standards
developed and approved by organizations accredited by ANSI.
American National
Standards Institute (ANSI): An
organization that accredits various standards-setting committees, and
monitors their compliance with the open rule-making process that they must
follow to qualify for ANSI accreditation. HIPAA prescribes that the
standards mandated under it be developed by ANSI-accredited bodies
whenever practical.
American Society
for Testing and Materials (ASTM):
A standards group that has published general guidelines for the
development of standards, including those for health care identifiers.
ASTM Committee E31 on Healthcare Informatics develops standards on
information used within healthcare.
AMIA:
See the American Medical Informatics Association.
ANS:
See American National Standards.
ANSI:
See the American National Standards Institute. Also see Part II, 45
CFR 160.103.
APC:
See Ambulatory Payment Class.
A/S, A.S., or AS:
See Administrative Simplification.
ASC:
See Accredited Standards Committee.
ASCA:
Administrative Simplification Compliance Act
ASO:
See Administrative Services Only.
ASS
(Administrative Simplification Section, Administrative Simplification
Standards): See Administrative
Simplification.
Application
Service Provider (ASP):
Essentially rents hardware server space for software applications to
end-users. In an ASP model of delivery, software applications are
delivered as services, rather than products, as in traditional licensing
models. Accordingly, ASPs run and maintain software applications on behalf
of the
end-user, who then accesses them over the Internet or through a virtual
private network (VPN).
ASPIRE:
AFEHCT's
Administrative Simplification Print Image Research Effort work group.
Association for
Electronic Health Care Transactions (AFEHCT):
An organization that promotes the use of EDI in the health care
industry.
ASTM:
See the American Society for Testing and Materials.
Automated
Clearinghouse (ACH): See Health
Care Clearinghouse.
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BA:
See Business Associate.
BBA:
The Balanced Budget Act of 1997.
BBRA:
The Balanced Budget Refinement Act of 1999.
BCBSA:
See the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association.
Biometric
Identifier: An identifier based on
some physical characteristic, such as a fingerprint.
Blue Cross and
Blue Shield Association (BCBSA): An association that represents the common interests of Blue Cross and Blue
Shield health plans. The BCBSA serves as the administrator
for the Health Care Code Maintenance Committee and also helps
maintain the HCPCS Level II codes.
BP:
See Business Partner.
Business Associate
(BA): A person or organization
that performs a function or activity on behalf of a covered entity,
but is not part of the covered entity’s workforce. A
business associate can also be a covered entity in its own
right. Also see Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
Business Model:
A model of a business organization
or process.
Business Partner
(BP): See Business Associate.
Business
Relationships:
- The term agent
is often used to describe a person or organization that assumes some of
the responsibilities of another one. This term has been avoided in the
final rules so that a more HIPAA-specific meaning could be used for
business associate. The term business partner (BP) was
originally used for business associate.
- A Third Party
Administrator (TPA) is a business associate that performs
claims administration and related business functions for a self-insured
entity.
- Under HIPAA, a
health care clearinghouse is a business associate that
translates data to or from a standard format in behalf of a covered
entity.
- The HIPAA Security
NPRM used the term Chain of Trust Agreement to describe the type
of contract that would be needed to extend the responsibility to protect
health care data across a series of subcontractual relationships.
- While a
business associate is an entity that performs certain business
functions for you, a trading partner is an external entity, such
as a customer, that you do business with. This relationship can be
formalized via a trading partner agreement. It is quite possible
to be a trading partner of an entity for some purposes, and a
business associate of that entity for other purposes.
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Cabulance:
A taxi cab that also functions as an ambulance.
CBO:
Congressional Budget Office or Cost Budget Office.
CDC:
See the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
CDTä :
See Current Dental Terminology.
CE:
See Covered Entity.
CEFACT:
See United Nations Centre for Facilitation of Procedures and Practices
for Administration, Commerce, and Transport (UN/CEFACT).
CEN:
European Center for Standardization, or Comite Europeen de Normalisation.
Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC):
An organization that maintains several
code sets included in the HIPAA standards, including the
ICD-9-CM codes.
Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS):
(formerly known as HCFA) the HHS agency responsible for
Medicare and parts of Medicaid. CMS has historically maintained the
UB-92 institutional EMC format specifications, the professional EMC NSF
specifications, and specifications for various certifications and
authorizations used by the Medicare and Medicaid programs. CMS also
maintains the HCPCS medical code set and the Medicare
Remittance Advice Remark Codes administrative code set.
Center for
Healthcare Information Management (CHIM):
A health information technology industry
association.
CFR or C.F.R.:
Code of Federal Regulations.
Chain of Trust
(COT): A term used in the HIPAA
Security NPRM for a pattern of agreements that extend protection of health
care data by requiring that each covered entity that shares health
care data with another entity require that that entity provide protections
comparable to those provided by the covered entity, and that that
entity, in turn, require that any other entities with which it shares the
data satisfy the same requirements.
CHAMPUS:
Civilian Health and Medical Program of the Uniformed Services.
CHIM:
See the Center for Healthcare Information
Management.
CHIME:
See the College of Healthcare Information Management Executives.
CHIP:
Child Health Insurance Program.
CIO:
Chief Information Officer
CISO:
Chief Information Security Officer
Claim Adjustment
Reason Codes: A national
administrative code set that identifies the reasons for any
differences, or adjustments, between the original provider charge for a
claim or service and the payer’s payment for it. This code set is
used in the X12 835 Claim Payment & Remittance Advice and the
X12 837 Claim transactions, and is maintained by the Health Care
Code Maintenance Committee.
Claim Attachment:
Any of a variety of hardcopy forms
or electronic records needed to process a claim in addition to the claim
itself.
Claim Medicare
Remark Codes: See Medicare
Remittance Advice Remark Codes.
Claim Status
Codes: A national
administrative code set that identifies the status of health care
claims. This code set is used in the X12 277 Claim Status
Notification transaction, and is maintained by the Health Care Code
Maintenance Committee.
Claim Status
Category Codes: A national
administrative code set that indicates the general category of the
status of health care claims. This code set is used in the X12
277 Claim Status Notification transaction, and is maintained by the
Health Care Code Maintenance Committee.
Clearinghouse:
See Health Care Clearinghouse.
CLIA:
Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments.
Clinical Code
Sets: See Medical Code Sets.
CM:
See ICD.
CMS:
See Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
COB:
See Coordination of Benefits.
Code Set:
Under HIPAA, this is any set of codes
used to encode data elements, such as tables of terms, medical
concepts, medical diagnostic codes, or medical procedure codes. This
includes both the codes and their descriptions. Also see Part II, 45 CFR
162.103.
Code Set
Maintaining Organization: Under
HIPAA, this is an organization that creates and maintains the code sets
adopted by the Secretary for use in the transactions for which
standards are adopted. Also see Part II, 45 CFR 162.103.
College of
Healthcare Information Management Executives (CHIME):
A professional organization for health care
Chief Information Officers (CIOs).
Comment:
Public commentary on the merits or
appropriateness of proposed or potential regulations provided in response
to an NPRM, an NOI, or other federal regulatory notice.
Common Control:
See Part II, 45 CFR 164.504.
Common Ownership:
See Part II, 45 CFR 164.504.
Compliance Date:
Under HIPAA, this is the date by which a covered entity must comply
with a standard, an implementation specification, or a
modification. This is usually 24 months after the effective data
of the associated final rule for most entities, but 36 months after the
effective data for small health plans. For future changes in
the standards, the compliance date would be at least 180
days after the effective data, but can be longer for small
health plans and for complex changes. Also see Part II, 45 CFR
160.103.
Computer-based
Patient Record Institute (CPRI) - Healthcare Open Systems and Trials
(HOST): An industry organization
that promotes the use of healthcare information systems, including
electronic healthcare records.
Contrary:
See Part II, 45 CFR 160.202.
Coordination of
Benefits (COB): A process for
determining the respective responsibilities of two or more health plans
that have some financial responsibility for a medical claim. Also called
cross-over.
CORF:
Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facility.
Correction:
See Amendments and Corrections.
Correctional
Institution: See Part II, 45 CFR
162.103.
COT:
See Chain of Trust.
Covered Entity
(CE): Under HIPAA, this is a
health plan, a health care clearinghouse, or a health care
provider who transmits any health information in electronic form in
connection with a HIPAA transaction. Also see Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
Covered Function:
Functions that make an entity a health plan, a health care
provider, or a health care clearinghouse. Also see Part II, 45
CFR 164.501.
CPRI-HOST:
See the Computer-based Patient Record Institute - Healthcare Open
Systems and Trials.
CPTä :
See Current Procedural Terminology.
Cross-over:
See Coordination of Benefits.
Cross-walk:
See Data Mapping.
Current Dental
Terminology (CDTä ): A medical
code set, maintained and copyrighted by the ADA, that has been
selected for use in the HIPAA transactions.
Current Procedural
Terminology (CPTä ): A medical
code set, maintained and copyrighted by the AMA, that has been
selected for use under HIPAA for non-institutional and non-dental
professional transactions.
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Data Aggregation:
See Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
Data Condition:
A description of the circumstances in which certain data is required. Also
see Part II, 45 CFR 162.103.
Data Content
Under HIPAA, this is all the
data elements and code sets inherent to a transaction, and not
related to the format of the transaction. Also see Part II, 45 CFR
162.103.
Data Content
Committee (DCC): See Designated
Data Content Committee.
Data Council:
A coordinating body within HHS
that has high-level responsibility for overseeing the implementation of
the A/S provisions of HIPAA.
Data Dictionary
(DD): A document or system that
characterizes the data content of a system.
Data Element:
Under HIPAA, this is the smallest
named unit of information in a transaction. Also see Part II, 45 CFR
162.103.
Data Interchange
Standards Association (DISA): A
body that provides administrative services to X12 and several other
standards-related groups.
Data Mapping:
The process of matching one set of
data elements or individual code values to their closest
equivalents in another set of them. This is sometimes called a
cross-walk.
Data Model:
A conceptual model of the information
needed to support a business function or process.
Data-Related Concepts:
- Clinical
or Medical Code Sets identify medical conditions and the
procedures, services, equipment, and supplies used to deal with them.
Non-clinical or non-medical or administrative code sets
identify or characterize entities and events in a manner that
facilitates an administrative process.
- HIPAA defines a
data element as the smallest unit of named information. In X12
language, that would be a simple data element. But X12 also has
composite data elements, which aren’t really data elements,
but are groups of closely related data elements that can repeat
as a group. X12 also has segments, which are also groups of
related data elements that tend to occur together, such as street
address, city, and state. These segments can sometimes repeat, or
one or more segments may be part of a loop that can repeat. For
example, you might have a claim loop that occurs once for each claim,
and a claim service loop that occurs once for each service included in a
claim. An X12 transaction is a collection of such loops,
segments, etc. that supports a specific business process, while an X12
transmission is a communication session during which one or more
X12 transactions is transmitted. Data elements and groups may
also be combined into records that make up conventional files, or into
the tables or segments used by database management systems, or DBMSs.
- A designated
code set is a code set that has been specified within the
body of a rule. These are usually medical code sets. Many other
code sets are incorporated into the rules by reference to a
separate document, such as an implementation guide, that
identifies one or more such code sets. These are usually
administrative code sets.
- Electronic data
is data that is recorded or transmitted electronically, while
non-electronic data would be everything else. Special cases would be
data transmitted by fax and audio systems, which is, in principle,
transmitted electronically, but which lacks the underlying structure
usually needed to support automated interpretation of its contents.
- Encoded data
is data represented by some identification or classification scheme,
such as a provider identifier or a procedure code. Non-encoded data
would be more nearly free-form, such as a name, a street address, or a
description. Theoretically, of course, all data, including grunts and
smiles, is encoded.
- For HIPAA
purposes, internal data, or internal code sets, are
data elements that are fully specified within the HIPAA
implementation guides. For X12 transactions, changes to the
associated code values and descriptions must be approved via the normal
standards development process, and can only be used in the revised
version of the standards affected. X12 transactions also use many coding
and identification schemes that are maintained by external
organizations. For these external code sets, the associated
values and descriptions can change at any time and still be usable in
any version of the X12 transactions that uses the associated code set.
- Individually
identifiable data is data that
can be readily associated with a specific individual. Examples would be
a name, a personal identifier, or a full street address. If life was
simple, everything else would be non-identifiable data. But even
if you remove the obviously identifiable data from a record, other
data elements present can also be used to re-identify it. For
example, a birth date and a zip code might be sufficient to re-identify
half the records in a file. The re-identifiability of data can be
limited by omitting, aggregating, or altering such data to the extent
that the risk of it being re-identified is acceptable.
- A specific form of
data representation, such as an X12 transaction, will generally include
some structural data that is needed to identify and interpret the
transaction itself, as well as the business data content that the
transaction is designed to transmit. Under HIPAA, when an alternate form
of data collection such as a browser is used, such structural or
format-related data elements can be ignored as long as the
appropriate business data content is used.
- Structured data
is data the meaning of which can be inferred to at least some extent
based on its absolute or relative location in a separately defined data
structure. This structure could be the blocks on a form, the fields in a
record, the relative positions of data elements in an X12
segment, etc. Unstructured data, such as a memo or an image,
would lack such clues.
Data Set:
See Part II, 45 CFR 162.103.
DCC:
See Data Content Committee.
D-Codes:
A subset of the HCPCS Level II medical code set with a high-order
value of "D" that has been used to identify certain dental procedures. The
final HIPAA transactions and code sets rule states that these D-codes
will be dropped from the HCPCS, and that CDT codes will be
used to identify all dental procedures.
DD:
See Data Dictionary.
DDE:
See Direct Data Entry.
DeCC:
See Dental Content Committee.
Dental Content
Committee (DeCC): An organization,
hosted by the American Dental Association, that maintains the data
content specifications for dental billing. The Dental Content Committee
has a formal consultative role under HIPAA for all transactions affecting
dental health care services.
Descriptor:
The text defining a code in a code set. Also see Part II, 45 CFR
162.103.
Designated Code
Set: A medical code set or
an administrative code set that HHS has designated for use
in one or more of the HIPAA standards.
Designated Data
Content Committee or Designated DCC:
An organization which HHS has
designated for oversight of the business data content of one or more of
the HIPAA-mandated transaction standards.
Designated Record
Set: See Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
Designated
Standard: A standard which
HHS has designated for use under the authority provided by HIPAA.
Designated
Standard Maintenance Organization (DSMO):
See Part II, 45 CFR 162.103.
DHHS:
See HHS.
DICOM:
See Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine.
Digital Imaging
and Communications in Medicine (DICOM):
A standard for communicating images,
such as x-rays, in a digitized form. This standard could become
part of the HIPAA claim attachments standards.
Direct Data Entry
(DDE): Under HIPAA, this is the
direct entry of data that is immediately transmitted into a health plan’s
computer. Also see Part II, 45 CFR 162.103.
Direct Treatment
Relationship: See Part II, 45 CFR
164.501.
DISA:
See the Data Interchange Standards Association.
Disclosure:
Release or divulgence of information by an entity to persons or
organizations outside of that entity. Also see Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
Disclosure
History: Under HIPAA this is a
list of any entities that have received personally identifiable health
care information for uses unrelated to treatment and payment.
DME:
Durable Medical Equipment.
DMEPOS:
Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies.
DMERC:
See Medicare Durable Medical Equipment Regional Carrier.
Draft Standard for
Trial Use (DSTU): An archaic term
for any X12 standard that has been approved since the most recent
release of X12 American National Standards. The current equivalent
term is "X12 standard".
DRG:
Diagnosis Related Group.
DSMO:
See Designated Standard Maintenance Organization.
DSTU:
See Draft Standard for Trial Use.
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EC:
See Electronic Commerce.
EDI:
See Electronic Data Interchange.
EDIFACT:
See United Nations Rules for Electronic Data Interchange for
Administration, Commerce, and Transport (UN/EDIFACT).
EDI
Translator: A software tool
for accepting an EDI transmission and converting the data
into another format, or for converting a non-EDI data file into an
EDI format for transmission.
Effective
Date: Under HIPAA, this is
the date that a final rule is effective, which is usually 60 days
after it is published in the Federal Register.
EFT:
See Electronic Funds Transfer.
EHNAC:
See the Electronic Healthcare Network Accreditation Commission.
EIN:
Employer Identification Number.
Electronic
Commerce (EC): The exchange
of business information by electronic means.
Electronic
Data Interchange (EDI): This
usually means X12 and similar variable-length formats for the
electronic exchange of structured data. It is sometimes used more
broadly to mean any electronic exchange of formatted data.
Electronic
Healthcare Network Accreditation Commission (EHNAC):
An organization that tests transactions
for consistency with the HIPAA requirements, and that accredits
health care clearinghouses.
Electronic
Media: See Part II, 45 CFR
162.103.
Electronic
Media Claims (EMC): This
term usually refers to a flat file format used to transmit or
transport claims, such as the 192-byte UB-92 Institutional EMC
format and the 320-byte Professional EMC NSF.
Electronic
Remittance Advice (ERA): Any
of several electronic formats for explaining the payments of health
care claims.
EMC:
See Electronic Media Claims.
EMR:
Electronic Medical Record.
EOB:
Explanation of Benefits.
EOMB:
Explanation of Medicare Benefits, Explanation of Medicaid Benefits,
or Explanation of Member Benefits.
EPSDT:
Early & Periodic Screening, Diagnosis, and Treatment.
ERA:
See Electronic Remittance Advice.
ERISA:
The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974.
ESRD:
End-Stage Renal Disease.
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FAQ(s):
Frequently Asked Question(s).
FDA: Food and
Drug Administration.
FERPA: Family
Educational Rights and Privacy Act.
FFS:
Fee-for-Service.
FI: See
Medicare Part A Fiscal Intermediary.
Flat File:
This term usually refers to a file that consists of a series of
fixed-length records that include some sort of record type code.
Format: Under
HIPAA, this is those data elements that provide or control
the enveloping or hierarchical structure, or assist in identifying
data content of, a transaction. Also see Part II, 45 CFR 162.103.
Also see Data-Related Concepts.
FR or F.R.:
Federal Register.
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GAO: General
Accounting Office.
GLBA: The
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act.
Group Health Plan:
Under HIPAA this is an employee welfare benefit plan that
provides for medical care and that either has 50 or more
participants or is administered by another business entity. Also see
Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
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H
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HCFA: See the
Health Care Financing Administration, now known as the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). Also see Part
II, 45 CFR 160.103.
HCFA-1450:
CMS (formerly known as HCFA)'s name for the institutional
uniform claim form, or UB-92.
HCFA-1500:
CMS (formerly known as HCFA)'s name for the professional uniform
claim form. Also known as the UCF-1500.
HCFA Common
Procedural Coding System (HCPCS): A medical code set that
identifies health care procedures, equipment, and supplies for claim
submission purposes. It has been selected for use in the HIPAA
transactions. HCPCS Level I contains numeric CPT codes
which are maintained by the AMA. HCPCS Level II
contains alphanumeric codes used to identify various items and
services that are not included in the CPT medical code set.
These are maintained by HCFA, the BCBSA, and the
HIAA. HCPCS Level III contains alphanumeric codes that
are assigned by Medicaid state agencies to identify additional items
and services not included in levels I or II. These are usually
called "local codes, and must have "W", "X", "Y", or "Z" in the
first position. HCPCS Procedure Modifier Codes can be used
with all three levels, with the WA - ZY range used for locally
assigned procedure modifiers.
HCPCS: See
HCFA Common Procedural Coding System. Also see Part II, 45 CFR
162.103.
Health and Human
Services (HHS): The federal government department that has
overall responsibility for implementing HIPAA.
Health Care:
See Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
Health Care
Clearinghouse: Under HIPAA, this is an entity that processes or
facilitates the processing of information received from another
entity in a nonstandard format or containing nonstandard data
content into standard data elements or a standard
transaction, or that receives a standard transaction from another
entity and processes or facilitates the processing of that
information into nonstandard format or nonstandard data content
for a receiving entity. Also see Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
Health Care Code
Maintenance Committee: An organization administered by the
BCBSA that is responsible for maintaining certain coding schemes
used in the X12 transactions and elsewhere. These include the
Claim Adjustment Reason Codes, the Claim Status Category
Codes, and the Claim Status Codes.
Health Care
Component: See Part II, 45 CFR 164.504.
Healthcare
Financial Management Association (HFMA): An organization for the
improvement of the financial management of healthcare-related
organizations. The HFMA sponsors some HIPAA educational
seminars.
Health Care
Financing Administration (HCFA): The former name of the Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the HHS agency
responsible for Medicare and parts of Medicaid. HCFA has
historically maintained the UB-92 institutional EMC format
specifications, the professional EMC NSF specifications, and
specifications for various certifications and authorizations used by
the Medicare and Medicaid programs. HCFA also maintains the
HCPCS medical code set and the Medicare Remittance
Advice Remark Codes administrative code set.
Healthcare
Information Management Systems Society (HIMSS): A professional
organization for healthcare information and management systems
professionals.
Health Care
Operations: See Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
Health Care
Provider: See Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
Health Care
Provider Taxonomy Committee: An organization administered by the
NUCC that is responsible for maintaining the Provider
Taxonomy coding scheme used in the X12 transactions. The detailed
code maintenance is done in coordination with X12N/TG2/WG15.
Health Industry
Business Communications Council (HIBCC): A council of health
care industry associations which has developed a number of technical
standards used within the health care industry.
Health Informatics
Standards Board (HISB): An ANSI-accredited standards group that
has developed an inventory of candidate standards for consideration
as possible HIPAA standards.
Health
Information: See Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
Health Insurance
Association of America (HIAA): An industry association that
represents the interests of commercial health care insurers. The
HIAA participates in the maintenance of some code sets,
including the HCPCS Level II codes.
Health Insurance
Issuer: See Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA): A Federal
law that allows persons to qualify immediately for comparable health
insurance coverage when they change their employment relationships.
Title II, Subtitle F, of HIPAA gives HHS the authority to
mandate the use of standards for the electronic exchange of health
care data; to specify what medical and administrative code
sets should be used within those standards; to require the use
of national identification systems for health care patients,
providers, payers (or plans), and employers (or sponsors); and to
specify the types of measures required to protect the security and
privacy of personally identifiable health care information. Also
known as the Kennedy-Kassebaum Bill, the Kassebaum-Kennedy Bill, K2,
or Public Law 104-191.
Health Level Seven
(HL7): An ANSI-accredited group that defines standards for the
cross-platform exchange of information within a health care
organization. HL7 is responsible for specifying the Level
Seven OSI standards for the health industry. The X12 275
transaction will probably incorporate the HL7 CRU message to
transmit claim attachments as part of a future HIPAA claim
attachments standard. The HL7 Attachment SIG is responsible for the
HL7 portion of this standard.
Health Maintenance
Organization (HMO): See Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
Health Oversight
Agency: See Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
Health Plan:
See Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
Health Plan ID:
See National Payer ID.
HEDIC: The
Healthcare EDI Coalition.
HEDIS: Health
Employer Data and Information Set.
HFMA: See the
Healthcare Financial Management Association.
HHA: Home
Health Agency.
HHIC: The
Hawaii Health Information Corporation.
HHS: See
Health and Human Services. Also see Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
HIAA: See the
Health Insurance Association of America.
HIBCC: See the
Health Industry Business Communications Council.
HIMSS: See the
Healthcare Information Management Systems Society.
HIPAA: See the
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996.
HIPAA Data
Dictionary or HIPAA DD: A data dictionary that defines
and cross-references the contents of all X12 transactions included
in the HIPAA mandate. It is maintained by X12N/TG3.
HISB: See the
Health Informatics Standards Board.
HL7: See
Health Level Seven.
HMO: See
Health Maintenance Organization.
HPAG: The
HIPAA Policy Advisory Group, a BCBSA subgroup.
HPSA: Health
Professional Shortage Area.
Hybrid Entity:
A covered entity whose covered functions are not its primary
functions. Also see Part II, 45 CFR 164.504.
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IAIABC: See the
International Association of Industrial Accident Boards and
Commissions.
ICD & ICD-n-CM &
ICD-n-PCS: International Classification of Diseases, with "n" =
"9" for Revision 9 or "10" for Revision 10, with "CM" = "Clinical
Modification", and with "PCS" = "Procedure Coding System".
ICF:
Intermediate Care Facility.
IDN:
Integrated Delivery Network.
IIHI: See
Individually Identifiable Health Information.
IG: See
Implementation Guide.
IHC: Internet
Healthcare Coalition.
Implementation
Guide (IG): A document explaining the proper use of a
standard for a specific business purpose. The X12N HIPAA IGs are
the primary reference documents used by those implementing the
associated transactions, and are incorporated into the HIPAA
regulations by reference.
Implementation
Specification: Under HIPAA, this is the specific instructions
for implementing a standard. Also see Part II, 45 CFR
160.103. See also Implementation Guide.
Indirect Treatment
Relationship: See Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
Individual:
See Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
Individually
Identifiable Health Information (IIHI): See Part II, 45 CFR
164.501.
Information Model:
A conceptual model of the information needed to support a
business function or process.
Inmate: See
Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
International
Association of Industrial Accident Boards and Commissions (IAIABC):
One of their standards is under consideration for use for the
First Report of Injury standard under HIPAA.
International
Classification of Diseases (ICD): A medical code set
maintained by the World Health Organization (WHO). The
primary purpose of this code set was to classify causes of
death. A US extension, maintained by the NCHS within the
CDC, identifies morbidity factors, or diagnoses. The ICD-9-CM
codes have been selected for use in the HIPAA transactions.
International
Organization for Standardization (ISO): An organization that
coordinates the development and adoption of numerous international
standards. "ISO" is not an acronym, but the Greek word for "equal".
International
Standards Organization: See International Organization for
Standardization (ISO).
IOM: The
Institute of Medicine.
IPA:
Independent Providers Association.
IRB:
Institutional Review Board.
ISO: See the
International Organization for Standardization.
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JCAHO: See the
Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations.
J-Codes: A
subset of the HCPCS Level II code set with a high-order value
of "J" that has been used to identify certain drugs and other items.
The final HIPAA transactions and code sets rule states that these
J-codes will be dropped from the HCPCS, and that NDC
codes will be used to identify the associated pharmaceuticals
and supplies.
JHITA: See the
Joint Healthcare Information Technology Alliance.
Joint Commission
on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO): An
organization that accredits healthcare organizations. In the future,
the JCAHO may play a role in certifying these organizations’
compliance with the HIPAA A/S requirements.
Joint Healthcare
Information Technology Alliance (JHITA): A healthcare industry
association that represents AHIMA, AMIA, CHIM,
CHIME, and HIMSS on legislative and regulatory issues
affecting the use of health information technology.
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Law Enforcement
Official: See Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
Local Code(s):
A generic term for code values that are defined for a state or other
political subdivision, or for a specific payer. This term is most
commonly used to describe HCPCS Level III Codes, but also applies to
state-assigned Institutional Revenue Codes, Condition Codes,
Occurrence Codes, Value Codes, etc.
Logical
Observation Identifiers, Names and Codes (LOINCä ): A set of
universal names and ID codes that identify laboratory and clinical
observations. These codes, which are maintained by the
Regenstrief Institute, are expected to be used in the HIPAA
claim attachments standard.
LOINCä : See
Logical Observation Identifiers, Names and Codes.
Loop: A
repeating structure or process.
LTC: Long-Term
Care.
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M
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Maintain or
Maintenance: See Part II, 45 CFR 162.103.
Marketing: See
Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
Massachusetts
Health Data Consortium (MHDC): An organization that seeks to
improve healthcare in New England through improved policy
development, better technology planning and implementation, and more
informed financial decision making.
Maximum Defined
Data Set: Under HIPAA, this is all of the required data
elements for a particular standard based on a specific
implementation specification. An entity creating a transaction
is free to include whatever data any receiver might want or need.
The recipient is free to ignore any portion of the data that is not
needed to conduct their part of the associated business transaction,
unless the inessential data is needed for coordination of benefits.
Also see Part II, 45 CFR 162.103.
MCO: Managed
Care Organization.
M+CO: Medicare
Plus Choice Organization.
Medicaid Fiscal
Agent (FA): The organization responsible for administering
claims for a state Medicaid program.
Medicaid State
Agency: The state agency responsible for overseeing the state’s
Medicaid program.
Medical Code Sets:
Codes that characterize a medical condition or treatment. These
code sets are usually maintained by professional societies
and public health organizations. Compare to administrative code
sets.
Medical Records
Institute (MRI): An organization that promotes the development
and acceptance of electronic health care record systems.
Medicare
Contractor: A Medicare Part A Fiscal Intermediary, a Medicare
Part B Carrier, or a Medicare Durable Medical Equipment Regional
Carrier (DMERC).
Medicare Durable
Medical Equipment Regional Carrier (DMERC): A Medicare
contractor responsible for administering Durable Medical Equipment (DME)
benefits for a region.
Medicare Part A
Fiscal Intermediary (FI): A Medicare contractor that administers
the Medicare Part A (institutional) benefits for a given region.
Medicare Part B
Carrier: A Medicare contractor that administers the Medicare
Part B (Professional) benefits for a given region.
Medicare
Remittance Advice Remark Codes: A national administrative
code set for providing either claim-level or service-level
Medicare-related messages that cannot be expressed with a Claim
Adjustment Reason Code. This code set is used in the
X12 835 Claim Payment & Remittance Advice transaction, and is
maintained by the HCFA.
Memorandum of
Understanding (MOU): A document providing a general description
of the responsibilities that are to be assumed by two or more
parties in their pursuit of some goal(s). More specific information
may be provided in an associated SOW.
MGMA: Medical
Group Management Association.
MHDC: See the
Massachusetts Health Data Consortium.
MHDI: See the
Minnesota Health Data Institute.
Minimum Scope of
Disclosure: The principle that, to the extent practical,
individually identifiable health information should only be
disclosed to the extent needed to support the purpose of the
disclosure.
Minnesota Health
Data Institute (MHDI): A public-private partnership for
improving the quality and efficiency of heath care in Minnesota.
MHDI includes the Minnesota Center for Healthcare Electronic
Commerce (MCHEC), which supports the adoption of standards for
electronic commerce and also supports the Minnesota EDI Healthcare
Users Group (MEHUG).
Modify or
Modification: Under HIPAA, this is a change adopted by the
Secretary, through regulation, to a standard or an
implementation specification. Also see Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
More Stringent:
See Part II, 45 CFR 160.202.
MOU: See
Memorandum of Understanding.
Master Patient or
Person Index (MPI): Whether in paper or electronic format, may
be considered the most important resource in a healthcare facility
because it is the link tracking patient, person, or member activity
within an organization (or enterprise) and across patient care
settings. The MPI identifies all patients who have been treated in a
facility or enterprise and lists the medical record or
identification number associated with the name. An index can be
maintained manually or as part of a computerized system. Retention
of entries depends upon the MPI's use. Typically, those for
healthcare facilities are retained permanently, while those for
insurers, registries, or others may have different retention
periods. a database of all the patients ever registered (within
reason) at a facility; name, demographics, insurance, next of kin,
etc.
MR: Medical
Review.
MRI: See the
Medical Records Institute.
MSP: Medicare
Secondary Payer.
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NAHDO: See the
National Association of Health Data Organizations.
NAIC: See the
National Association of Insurance Commissioners.
NANDA: North
American Nursing Diagnoses Association.
NASMD: See the
National Association of State Medicaid Directors.
National
Association of Health Data Organizations (NAHDO): A group that
promotes the development and improvement of state and national
health information systems.
National
Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC): An association of
the insurance commissioners of the states and territories.
National
Association of State Medicaid Directors (NASMD): An association
of state Medicaid directors. NASMD is affiliated with the
American Public Health Human Services Association (APHSA).
National Center
for Health Statistics (NCHS): A federal organization within the
CDC that collects, analyzes, and distributes health care
statistics. The NCHS maintains the ICD-n-CM codes.
National Committee
for Quality Assurance (NCQA): An organization that accredits
managed care plans, or Health Maintenance Organizations
(HMOs). In the future, the NCQA may play a role in certifying
these organizations’ compliance with the HIPAA A/S requirements. The
NCQA also maintains the Health Employer Data and Information
Set (HEDIS).
National Committee
on Vital and Health Statistics (NCVHS): A Federal advisory body
within HHS that advises the Secretary regarding
potential changes to the HIPAA standards.
National Council
for Prescription Drug Programs (NCPDP): An ANSI-accredited group
that maintains a number of standard formats for use by the retail
pharmacy industry, some of which are included in the HIPAA mandates.
Also see NCPDP … Standard.
National Drug Code
(NDC): A medical code set that identifies prescription
drugs and some over the counter products, and that has been selected
for use in the HIPAA transactions.
National Employer
ID: A system for uniquely identifying all sponsors of health
care benefits.
National Health
Information Infrastructure (NHII): This is a healthcare-specific
lane on the Information Superhighway, as described in the National
Information Infrastructure (NII) initiative. Conceptually, this
includes the HIPAA A/S initiatives.
National Patient
ID: A system for uniquely identifying all recipients of health
care services. This is sometimes referred to as the National
Individual Identifier (NII), or as the Healthcare ID.
National Payer ID:
A system for uniquely identifying all organizations that pay for
health care services. Also known as Health Plan ID, or Plan ID.
National Provider
ID (NPI): A system for uniquely identifying all providers of
health care services, supplies, and equipment.
National Provider
File (NPF): The database envisioned for use in maintaining a
national provider registry.
National Provider
Registry: The organization envisioned for assigning National
Provider IDs.
National Provider
System (NPS): The administrative system envisioned for
supporting a national provider registry.
National Standard
Format (NSF): Generically, this applies to any nationally
standardized data format, but it is often used in a more limited way
to designate the Professional EMC NSF, a 320-byte flat file
record format used to submit professional claims.
National Uniform
Billing Committee (NUBC): An organization, chaired and hosted by
the American Hospital Association, that maintains the UB-92
hardcopy institutional billing form and the data element
specifications for both the hardcopy form and the 192-byte UB-92
flat file EMC format. The NUBC has a formal consultative role
under HIPAA for all transactions affecting institutional health care
services.
National Uniform
Claim Committee (NUCC): An organization, chaired and hosted by
the American Medical Association, that maintains the
HCFA-1500 claim form and a set of data element
specifications for professional claims submission via the
HCFA-1500 claim form, the Professional EMC NSF, and the
X12 837. The NUCC also maintains the Provider
Taxonomy Codes and has a formal consultative role under HIPAA
for all transactions affecting non-dental non-institutional
professional health care services.
NCHICA: See
the North Carolina Healthcare Information and Communications
Alliance.
NCHS: See the
National Center for Health Statistics.
NCPDP: See the
National Council for Prescription Drug Programs.
NCPDP Batch
Standard: An NCPDP standard designed for use by
low-volume dispensers of pharmaceuticals, such as nursing homes. Use
of Version 1.0 of this standard has been mandated under
HIPAA.
NCPDP
Telecommunication Standard: An NCPDP standard
designed for use by high-volume dispensers of pharmaceuticals, such
as retail pharmacies. Use of Version 5.1 of this standard has
been mandated under HIPAA.
NCQA: See the
National Committee for Quality Assurance.
NCVHS: See the
National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics.
NDC: See
National Drug Code.
NHII: See
National Health Information Infrastructure.
NOC: Not
Otherwise Classified or Nursing Outcomes Classification.
NOI: See
Notice of Intent.
Non-Clinical or
Non-Medical Code Sets: See Administrative Code Sets.
North Carolina
Healthcare Information and Communications Alliance (NCHICA): An
organization that promotes the advancement and integration of
information technology into the health care industry.
Notice of Intent (NOI):
A document that describes a subject area for which the Federal
Government is considering developing regulations. It may describe
the presumably relevant considerations and invite comments
from interested parties. These comments can then be used in
developing an NPRM or a final regulation.
Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (NPRM): A document that describes and explains
regulations that the Federal Government proposes to adopt at some
future date, and invites interested parties to submit comments
related to them. These comments can then be used in
developing a final regulation.
NPF: See
National Provider File.
NPI: See
National Provider ID.
NPRM: See
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.
NPS: See
National Provider System.
NSF: See
National Standard Format.
NUBC: See the
National Uniform Billing Committee.
NUBC EDI TAG:
The NUBC EDI Technical Advisory Group, which coordinates issues
affecting both the NUBC and the X12 standards.
NUCC: See the
National Uniform Claim Committee.
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OCR: See the
Office for Civil Rights.
Office for Civil
Rights: The HHS entity responsible for enforcing the HIPAA
privacy rules.
Office of
Management & Budget (OMB): A Federal Government agency that has
a major role in reviewing proposed Federal regulations.
OIG: Office of
the Inspector General.
OMB: See the
Office of Management & Budget.
Open System
Interconnection (OSI): A multi-layer ISO data
communications standard. Level Seven of this standard is
industry-specific, and HL7 is responsible for specifying the
level seven OSI standards for the health industry.
Organized Health
Care Arrangement: See Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
OSI: See
Open System Interconnection.
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PAG: See
Policy Advisory Group.
Payer: In
health care, an entity that assumes the risk of paying for medical
treatments. This can be an uninsured patient, a self-insured
employer, a health plan, or an HMO.
PAYERID: CMS
(formerly known as HCFA)'s term for their pre-HIPAA National
Payer ID initiative.
Payment: See
Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
PCS: See
ICD.
PHB: Pharmacy
Benefits Manager.
PHI: See
Protected Health Information.
PHS: Public
Health Service.
PL or P. L.:
Public Law, as in PL 104-191 (HIPAA).
Plan
Administration Functions: See Part II, 45 CFR 164.504.
Plan ID: See
National Payer ID.
Plan Sponsor:
An entity that sponsors a health plan. This can be an
employer, a union, or some other entity. Also see Part II, 45 CFR
164.501.
Policy Advisory
Group (PAG): A generic name for many work groups at WEDI and
elsewhere.
POS: Place of
Service or Point of Service.
PPO: Preferred
Provider Organization
PPS:
Prospective Payment System.
PRA: The
Paperwork Reduction Act.
PRG:
Procedure-Related Group.
Pricer or Repricer:
A person, an organization, or a software package that reviews
procedures, diagnoses, fee schedules, and other data and determines
the eligible amount for a given health care service or supply.
Additional criteria can then be applied to determine the actual
allowance, or payment, amount.
PRO:
Professional Review Organization or Peer Review Organization.
Protected Health
Information (PHI): See Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
Provider Taxonomy
Codes: An administrative code set for identifying the
provider type and area of specialization for all health care
providers. A given provider can have several Provider Taxonomy
Codes. This code set is used in the X12 278
Referral Certification and Authorization and the X12 837
Claim transactions, and is maintained by the NUCC.
Psychotherapy
Notes: See Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
Public Health
Authority: See Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
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RA: Remittance
Advice.
Regenstrief
Institute: A research foundation for improving health care by
optimizing the capture, analysis, content, and delivery of health
care information. Regenstrief maintains the LOINC
coding system that is being considered for use as part of the HIPAA
claim attachments standard.
Relates to the
Privacy of Individually Identifiable Health Information: See
Part II, 45 CFR 160.202.
Required by Law:
See Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
Research: See
Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
RFA: The
Regulatory Flexibility Act.
RVS: Relative
Value Scale.
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SC: Subcommittee.
SCHIP: The
State Children’s Health Insurance Program.
SDO: Standards
Development Organization.
Secretary:
Under HIPAA, this refers to the Secretary of HHS or
his/her designated representatives. Also see Part II, 45 CFR
160.103.
Segment: Under
HIPAA, this is a group of related data elements in a
transaction. Also see Part II, 45 CFR 162.103.
Self-Insured:
An individual or organization that assumes the financial risk of
paying for health care.
Small Health Plan:
Under HIPAA, this is a health plan with annual receipts
of $5 million or less. Also see Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
SNF: Skilled
Nursing Facility.
SNOMED:
Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine.
SNIP: See
Strategic National Implementation Process.
Sponsor: See
Plan Sponsor.
SOW: See
Statement of Work.
SSN: Social
Security Number.
SSO: See
Standard-Setting Organization.
Standard: See
Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
Standard-Setting
Organization (SSO): See Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
Standard
Transaction: Under HIPAA, this is a transaction that complies
with the applicable HIPAA standard. Also see Part II, 45 CFR
162.103.
Standard
Transaction Format Compliance System (STFCS): An EHNAC-sponsored
WPC-hosted HIPAA compliance certification service.
State: See
Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
State Law: A
constitution, statue, regulation, rule, common law, or any other
State action having the force and effect of law. Also see Part II,
45 CFR 160.202.
State Uniform
Billing Committee (SUBC): A state-specific affiliate of the
NUBC.
Statement of Work
(SOW): A document describing the specific tasks and
methodologies that will be followed to satisfy the requirements of
an associated contract or MOU.
STFCS: See the
Standard Transaction Format Compliance System.
Strategic National
Implementation Process (SNIP): A WEDI program for helping the
health care industry identify and resolve HIPAA implementation
issues.
Structured Data:
See Data-Related Concepts.
SUBC: See
State Uniform Billing Committee.
Summary Health
Information: See Part II, 45 CFR 164.504.
SWG:
Subworkgroup.
Syntax: The
rules and conventions that one needs to know or follow in order to
validly record information, or interpret previously recorded
information, for a specific purpose. Thus, a syntax is a grammar.
Such rules and conventions may be either explicit or implicit. In
X12 transactions, the data-element separators, the sub-element
separators, the segment terminators, the segment identifiers, the
loops, the loop identifiers (when present), the repetition factors,
etc., are all aspects of the X12 syntax. When explicit, such
syntactical elements tend to be the structural, or format-related,
data elements that are not required when a direct data
entry architecture is used. Ultimately, though, there is not a
perfectly clear division between the syntactical elements and the
business data content.
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TAG: Technical
Advisory Group.
TG: Task
Group.
Third Party
Administrator (TPA): An entity that processes health care claims
and performs related business functions for a health plan.
TPA: See
Third Party Administrator or Trading Partner Agreement.
TPO:
Treatment, Payment, and Operations.
Trading Partner
Agreement (TPA): See Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
Transaction:
Under HIPAA, this is the exchange of information between two parties
to carry out financial or administrative activities related to
health care. Also see Part II, 45 CFR 160.103.
Transaction Change
Request System: A system established under HIPAA for accepting
and tracking change requests for any of the HIPAA mandated
transactions standards via a single web site. See www.hipaa-dsmo.org.
Translator:
See EDI Translator.
Treatment: See
Part II, 45 CFR 164.501.
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UB: Uniform Bill,
as in UB-82 or UB-92.
UB-82: A
uniform institutional claim form developed by the NUBC that
was in general use from 1983 - 1993.
UB-92: A
uniform institutional claim form developed by the NUBC that
has been in general use since 1993.
UCF: Uniform
Claim Form, as in UCF-1500.
UCTF: See the
Uniform Claim Task Force.
UHI: Unique
Health Identifier.
UHIN: See the
Utah Health Information Network.
UN/CEFACT: See
the United Nations Centre for Facilitation of Procedures and
Practices for Administration, Commerce, and Transport.
UN/EDIFACT:
See the United Nations Rules for Electronic Data Interchange for
Administration, Commerce, and Transport.
Uniform Claim Task
Force (UCTF): An organization that developed the initial
HCFA-1500 Professional Claim Form. The maintenance
responsibilities were later assumed by the NUCC.
United Nations
Centre for Facilitation of Procedures and Practices for
Administration, Commerce, and Transport (UN/CEFACT): An
international organization dedicated to the elimination or
simplification of procedural barriers to international commerce.
United Nations
Rules for Electronic Data Interchange for Administration, Commerce,
and Transport (UN/EDIFACT): An international EDI format.
Interactive X12 transactions use the EDIFACT message syntax.
UNSM: United
Nations Standard Messages.
Unstructured Data:
See Data-Related Concepts.
UPIN: Unique
Physician Identification Number.
UR:
Utilization Review.
USC or U.S.C:
United States Code.
Use: See Part
II, 45 CFR 164.501.
Utah Health
Information Network (UHIN): A public-private coalition for
reducing health care administrative costs through the
standardization and electronic exchange of health care data. |
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Value-Added Network
(VAN): A vendor of EDI data communications and translation
services.
VAN: See
Value-Added Network.
Virtual Private
Network (VPN): A technical strategy for creating secure
connections, or tunnels, over the internet.
VPN: See
Virtual Private Network.
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Washington Publishing
Company (WPC): The company that publishes the X12N HIPAA
Implementation guides and the X12N HIPAA Data Dictionary, that
also developed the X12 Data Dictionary, and that hosts the EHNAC
STFCS testing program.
WEDI: See the
Workgroup for Electronic Data Interchange.
WG: Work
Group.
WHO: See the
World Health Organization.
Workforce:
Under HIPAA, this means employees, volunteers, trainees, and other
persons under the direct control of a covered entity, whether
or not they are paid by the covered entity. Also see Part II,
45 CFR 160.103.
Workgroup for
Electronic Data Interchange (WEDI): A health care industry group
that lobbied for HIPAA A/S, and that has a formal consultative role
under the HIPAA legislation. WEDI also sponsors SNIP.
World Health
Organization (WHO): An organization that maintains the
International Classification of Diseases (ICD) medical code
set.
WPC: See the
Washington Publishing Company.
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X12: An
ANSI-accredited group that defines EDI standards for many American
industries, including health care insurance. Most of the electronic
transaction standards mandated or proposed under HIPAA are X12
standards.
X12 148: The
X12 First Report of Injury, Illness, or Incident transaction. This
standard could eventually be included in the HIPAA mandate.
X12 270: The
X12 Health Care Eligibility & Benefit Inquiry transaction. Version
4010 of this transaction has been included in the HIPAA mandates.
X12 271: The
X12 Health Care Eligibility & Benefit Response transaction. Version
4010 of this transaction has been included in the HIPAA mandates.
X12 274: The
X12 Provider Information transaction.
X12 275: The
X12 Patient Information transaction. This transaction is expected to
be part of the HIPAA claim attachments standard.
X12 276: The
X12 Health Care Claims Status Inquiry transaction. Version 4010 of
this transaction has been included in the HIPAA mandates.
X12 277: The
X12 Health Care Claim Status Response transaction. Version 4010 of
this transaction has been included in the HIPAA mandates. This
transaction is also expected to be part of the HIPAA claim
attachments standard.
X12 278: The
X12 Referral Certification and Authorization transaction. Version
4010 of this transaction has been included in the HIPAA mandates.
X12 811: The
X12 Consolidated Service Invoice & Statement transaction.
X12 820: The
X12 Payment Order & Remittance Advice transaction. Version 4010 of
this transaction has been included in the HIPAA mandates.
X12 831: The
X12 Application Control Totals transaction.
X12 834: The
X12 Benefit Enrollment & Maintenance transaction. Version 4010 of
this transaction has been included in the HIPAA mandates.
X12 835: The
X12 Health Care Claim Payment & Remittance Advice transaction.
Version 4010 of this transaction has been included in the HIPAA
mandates.
X12 837: The
X12 Health Care Claim or Encounter transaction. This transaction can
be used for institutional, professional, dental, or drug claims.
Version 4010 of this transaction has been included in the HIPAA
mandates.
X12 997: The
X12 Functional Acknowledgement transaction.
X12F: A
subcommittee of X12 that defines EDI standards for the
financial industry. This group maintains the X12 811
[generic] Invoice and the X12 820 [generic] Payment &
Remittance Advice transactions, although X12N maintains the
associated HIPAA Implementation guides.
X12 IHCEBI &
IHCEBR: The X12 Interactive Healthcare Eligibility & Benefits
Inquiry (IHCEBI) and Response (IHCEBR) transactions. These are being
combined and converted to UN/EDIFACT Version 5 syntax.
X12 IHCLME:
The X12 Interactive Healthcare Claim transaction.
X12J: A
subcommittee of X12 that reviews X12 work products for
compliance with the X12 design rules.
X12N: A
subcommittee of X12 that defines EDI standards for the
insurance industry, including health care insurance.
X12N/SPTG4:
The HIPAA Liaison Special Task Group of the Insurance Subcommittee
(N) of X12. This group’s responsibilities have been assumed
by X12N/TG3/WG3.
X12N/TG1: The
Property & Casualty Task Group (TG1) of the Insurance Subcommittee
(N) of X12.
X12N/TG2: The
Health Care Task Group (TG2) of the Insurance Subcommittee (N) of
X12.
X12N/TG2/WG1:
The Health Care Eligibility Work Group (WG1) of the Health Care Task
Group (TG2) of the Insurance Subcommittee (N) of X12. This
group maintains the X12 270 Health Care Eligibility & Benefit
Inquiry and the X12 271 Health Care Eligibility & Benefit
Response transactions, and is also responsible for maintaining the
IHCEBI and IHCEBR transactions.
X12N/TG2/WG2:
The Health Care Claims Work Group (WG2) of the Health Care Task
Group (TG2) of the Insurance Subcommittee (N) of X12. This
group maintains the X12 837 Health Care Claim or Encounter
transaction.
X12N/TG2/WG3:
The Health Care Claim Payments Work Group (WG3) of the Health Care
Task Group (TG2) of the Insurance Subcommittee (N) of X12.
This group maintains the X12 835 Health Care Claim Payment &
Remittance Advice transaction.
X12N/TG2/WG4:
The Health Care Enrollments Work Group (WG4) of the Health Care Task
Group (TG2) of the Insurance Subcommittee (N) of X12. This
group maintains the X12 834 Benefit Enrollment & Maintenance
transaction.
X12N/TG2/WG5:
The Health Care Claims Status Work Group (WG5) of the Health Care
Task Group (TG2) of the Insurance Subcommittee (N) of X12.
This group maintains the X12 276 Health Care Claims Status
Inquiry and the X12 277 Health Care Claim Status Response
transactions.
X12N/TG2/WG9:
The Health Care Patient Information Work Group (WG9) of the Health
Care Task Group (TG2) of the Insurance Subcommittee (N) of X12.
This group maintains the X12 275 Patient Information
transaction.
X12N/TG2/WG10:
The Health Care Services Review Work Group (WG10) of the Health Care
Task Group (TG2) of the Insurance Subcommittee (N) of X12.
This group maintains the X12 278 Referral Certification and
Authorization transaction.
X12N/TG2/WG12:
The Interactive Health Care Claims Work Group (WG12) of the Health
Care Task Group (TG2) of the Insurance Subcommittee (N) of X12.
This group maintains the IHCLME Interactive Claims transaction.
X12N/TG2/WG15:
The Health Care Provider Information Work Group (WG15) of the Health
Care Task Group (TG2) of the Insurance Subcommittee (N) of X12.
This group maintains the X12 274 Provider Information
transaction.
X12N/TG2/WG19:
The Health Care Implementation Coordination Work Group (WG19) of the
Health Care Task Group (TG2) of the Insurance Subcommittee (N) of
X12. This is now X12N/TG3/WG3.
X12N/TG3: The
Business Transaction Coordination and Modeling Task Group (TG3) of
the Insurance Subcommittee (N) of X12. TG3 maintains the X12N
Business and Data Models and the HIPAA Data Dictionary. This was
formerly X12N/TG2/WG11.
X12N/TG3/WG1:
The Property & Casualty Work Group (WG1) of the Business Transaction
Coordination and Modeling Task Group (TG3) of the Insurance
Subcommittee (N) of X12.
X12N/TG3/WG2:
The Healthcare Business & Information Modeling Work Group (WG2) of
the Business Transaction Coordination and Modeling Task Group (TG3)
of the Insurance Subcommittee (N) of X12.
X12N/TG3/WG3:
The HIPAA Implementation Coordination Work Group (WG3) of the
Business Transaction Coordination and Modeling Task Group (TG3) of
the Insurance Subcommittee (N) of X12. This was formerly
X12N/TG2/WG19 and X12N/SPTG4.
X12N/TG3/WG4:
The Object-Oriented Modeling and XML Liaison Work Group (WG4) of the
Business Transaction Coordination and Modeling Task Group (TG3) of
the Insurance Subcommittee (N) of X12.
X12N/TG4: The
Implementation Guide Task Group (TG4) of the Insurance Subcommittee
(N) of X12. This group supports the development and
maintenance of X12 Implementation Guides, including the HIPAA X12
IGs.
X12N/TG8: The
Architecture Task Group (TG8) of the Insurance Subcommittee (N) of
X12.
X12/PRB: The
X12 Procedures Review Board.
X12 Standard:
The term currently used for any X12 standard that has been
approved since the most recent release of X12 American National
Standards. Since a full set of X12 American National
Standards is only released about once every five years, it is
the X12 standards that are most likely to be in active use.
These standards were previously called Draft Standards for Trial
Use.
XML:
Extensible Markup Language.
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Source:
HIPAAdvisory
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