- From: <Peter.Hendler@kp.org>
- Date: Thu, 18 Oct 2012 09:37:44 -0700
- To: renato.iannella@nehta.gov.au
- Cc: andy.stechishin@gmail.com, public-semweb-lifesci@w3.org, rene.spronk@ringholm.com
- Message-ID: <OF6D495714.9290F42F-ON88257A9B.005B2FA9-88257A9B.005B5A27@kp.org>
We can compute that but not all in the ontology from the reasoner. That part would be computed in the Closed World OO part of the model. the Ontology part so far is only the Clinical Findings and Procedures to answer the "what". Once we know that we go to SQL. to calculate the rest of your example question. NOTICE TO RECIPIENT: If you are not the intended recipient of this e-mail, you are prohibited from sharing, copying, or otherwise using or disclosing its contents. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender immediately by reply e-mail and permanently delete this e-mail and any attachments without reading, forwarding or saving them. Thank you. Renato Iannella <renato.iannella@nehta.gov.au> 10/17/2012 09:24 PM To Peter Hendler/CA/KAIPERM@KAIPERM cc public-semweb-lifesci@w3.org, andy.stechishin@gmail.com, rene.spronk@ringholm.com Subject Re: Out of Cycle HL7 RIMBAA meeting Nov 20th Kaiser Pleasanton Technology Campus On 17 Oct 2012, at 08:11, Peter.Hendler@kp.org wrote: We limit the SNOMED codes to the "what" part of the model, and we use the OO for the "who when where" etc. Hi Peter, does this then limit your ability to detect (computationally) dependencies that go thru the OO model? For example, Person has Allergy substance X and is prescribed Medicine Y (with active ingredient substance X) Cheers Dr Renato Iannella Lead Architect, Information & Policy Services nehta - National E-Health Transition Authority Phone: +61 7 3023 8578 Mobile: +61 4 1313 2206
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Received on Thursday, 18 October 2012 16:38:49 UTC