Excellent if we can get there. My concern is that someone opens my meticulously 
crafted (using LinkEHR) ACTION with transitions in AE, to fix say a translation 
error, removing all transition info when they save. Hopefully these new tools 
become good enough to be accepted by all users.

Vennlig hilsen
Ivar Yrke
Senior systemutvikler
DIPS AS
Telefon +47 75 59 24 06
Mobil +47 90 78 89 33


Fra: openEHR-clinical [mailto:openehr-clinical-boun...@lists.openehr.org] På 
vegne av Pablo Pazos
Sendt: 27. juli 2018 11:45
Til: For openEHR clinical discussions <openehr-clinical@lists.openehr.org>
Emne: Re: How to define transitions in the ISM

The nice thing is artifacts are standard, so you can use AE, and when you find 
a limitation, just load the ADL on LinkEHR to add the tiny bits, also can 
export OPT from there. Until we have a perfect tool, we need to use what is 
there (and free). Also use and feedback make tools to evolve, and currently the 
more active dev effort is on LinkEHR. My idea is to completely switch all ADL 
and template design to LinkEHR in the short term.

On Fri, Jul 27, 2018, 06:14 Ivar Yrke <i...@dips.no<mailto:i...@dips.no>> wrote:
Pablo, it would be great to hear how to get on with LinkEHR.

To me it seems very «technical», exposing all the nitty-gritty details and 
requiring knowledge of such from the user. So I can’t see how we can force 
everyone to use that tool rather than AE, resulting in loss of information. So 
even though there might be a tool that works all the way through we really have 
a tool issue.

Vennlig hilsen
Ivar Yrke
Senior systemutvikler
DIPS AS
Telefon +47 75 59 24 06
Mobil +47 90 78 89 33


Fra: openEHR-clinical 
[mailto:openehr-clinical-boun...@lists.openehr.org<mailto:openehr-clinical-boun...@lists.openehr.org>]
 På vegne av Pablo Pazos
Sendt: 27. juli 2018 10:32
Til: For openEHR clinical discussions 
<openehr-clinical@lists.openehr.org<mailto:openehr-clinical@lists.openehr.org>>
Emne: Re: How to define transitions in the ISM

@Peter thanks for the feedback!

As Diego mentioned, I think currently the only tool that support full 
specification of constraints for the ISM is LinkEHR, I need to test it! And 
since they added OPT support, transitions might get exported as well.

I also have the VB code, but I'm a little allergic to VB :)

Best,
Pablo.

On Fri, Jul 27, 2018 at 5:02 AM, Ivar Yrke <i...@dips.no<mailto:i...@dips.no>> 
wrote:
Hi Peter, thanks for your reply. It adds several relevant facts and background 
to the problem description.

We did in fact have a copy of the AE with transistions, but we could not figure 
out how to use it. We do not need to go beyond the RM, we only need to fully 
specify according to RM. If memory serves me right I think that implementation 
did not help us with that. In fact, I think the whole 
implementation/visualization if pathway in AE is part of the 
problem/limitation. It kind of contains a left-to-right idea, which isn’t 
really reflection the dynamics of the ISM.

I actually did look into the code. After some struggling into the VB code 
(which isn’t my strong side) I eventually found that the problem also went into 
the underlying java-classes (which is not my strong side either). I concluded 
this was not an easy fix, which I had hoped, and basically gave up.

But you are absolutely right, the rest of the tool stack is just as important. 
This problem really needs support from the community and is desperately needed 
for serious use of the ISM.

Vennlig hilsen
Ivar Yrke
Senior systemutvikler
DIPS AS
Telefon +47 75 59 24 06
Mobil +47 90 78 89 33


Fra: openEHR-clinical 
[mailto:openehr-clinical-boun...@lists.openehr.org<mailto:openehr-clinical-boun...@lists.openehr.org>]
 På vegne av Peter Gummer
Sendt: 26. juli 2018 15:18

Til: For openEHR clinical discussions 
<openehr-clinical@lists.openehr.org<mailto:openehr-clinical@lists.openehr.org>>
Emne: Re: How to define transitions in the ISM

Hi Ivar and Pablo,

Reading this, I had the vague recollection that old versions of Archetype 
Editor used to have a stab at supporting the transition, but that I had removed 
it because it didn’t actually work. A quick search of github … and here’s the 
relevant commit, more than five years ago:

https://github.com/openEHR/arch_ed-dotnet/commit/7cd2968557074daec0e4ca97b6518483f516ba01

And here’s the comment that I wrote explaining the change:


In ACTION archetypes, remove the Transitions option from the Pathway 
Specification. It has never worked and no one has ever found that the 
transition constraints should be limited more than the standard openEHR state 
diagram. The partial implementation that was in place also seemed back-to-front 
with respect to the reference model: the RM specifies the transition that which 
occurred to arrive in the current state, whereas the user interface was 
constraining which states could be reached from the current state. For 
simplicity and to avoid confusion, it's best to remove the existing 
non-functional implementation.

So … “no one has ever found that the transition constraints should be limited 
more than the standard openEHR state diagram." Based on what you’ve written 
below, Ivar, it sounds like you now have a convincing case for implementing it!

Sadly, it would seem that nobody has been supporting the Archetype Editor 
github repository since my final commit almost three years ago:

https://github.com/openEHR/arch_ed-dotnet/commits/master

Nonetheless, anyone can clone the repository and implement the transition in 
Archetype Editor, if they have the time, skill and will to do so. But 
unfortunately I don’t think this will solve your problem. Whenever we used to 
implement a new feature in Archetype Editor, we had to take into consideration 
its impact on the downstream tools. You’ve mentioned that Template Designer 
ignores the transition; so even if you did get the transition into your 
archetype, wouldn’t it be lost in your templates? Beyond the template and the 
OPT, further downstream support would be needed. Has support for the transition 
been implemented in CKM and whatever runtime openEHR libraries your software is 
built upon?

I don’t see an easy solution for you, because your whole stack would need to 
support it. Hand-coding the ADL, OPT, etc. is an ugly solution, but it’s a 
solution that won't work at all unless your downstream tools and software can 
accept the transition.

Regards,
Peter


On 23 Jul 2018, at 21:58, Ivar Yrke <i...@dips.no<mailto:i...@dips.no>> wrote:

Hi all
Somewhat late reply due to vacation…

We have come across that same problem and for us it actually was a show stopper 
for which we had to invent a work around.

First a remark about the tools:
We saw that ArchetypeEditor did not add the transition. So we tried to add I 
manually to the adl-file. We found however that AE ignores it and after saving 
again from AE it is gone. Further we tried to use the modified adl in a 
template using Template Designer, but it was ignored and no trace of it in the 
resulting opt.

These are very serious limitations in the tools and forces a work around that 
we should very much like to abandon (see below). It raises the question how the 
community should go forward to make sure there are appropriate tools. Who owns 
the tools? Who pays for their maintenance?

The ISM is potentially a very powerful asset of openEHR. Missing the transition 
property mutilates it to very limited value.

Then a remark to Silje’s reply:
“Solving” the problem in the business logic is only possible when recoding 
after the fact. Given that the current state is so and so and the new state is 
so and so we can deduce (in most cases) the transition.

Our problem:
Our problem is the opposite of solving after the fact. We want to present to 
the user only the transitions valid at any moment in time. Given the ISM and 
completely defined ISM_TRANSITIONs this would be possible and easy. But not so 
without the transition! Without that information it is not possible to 
distinguish the transitions having the same current state.

To see the problem, assume a simple state machine with one of each of these 
transitions: active_step, suspend and resume. Let the current state be 
SUSPENDED (last recorded action was suspend). In this state we only want to 
give the user the option to resume. However, without the transition property in 
the ISM_TRANSITION we cannot distinguish resume from active_step. Both have 
ACTIVE as their current step and careflow_step is only descriptive and not 
usable. The only option is to give the user all choices and assume he does the 
right thing. Not a good option. After all, resuming a suspended drug and 
administering the drug are quite different things and we do not want an 
erroneous administering to take place as result of our system suggesting it!

Our work around:
Fortunately each ISM_TRANSITION has a unique id. Based on this id we add the 
missing transition, from our own local configuration, to the archetypes we use 
after having loaded them. This information is transient and only lives in our 
memory instances of the archetype. But at least we have it available so that we 
can make a full state machine evaluation and find only the relevant transitions 
to present to the user.

Some questions:
What if the user inadvertently administers a drug that has been suspended? In 
that case he surely needs to have this transition anyway, doesn’t he? Well, 
yes, but not as a suggestion from our system! This situation must be handled 
separately from guiding the user through the states. In fact, it could be 
argued that this be recorded as an ad hoc action.

With regards,
Ivar Yrke
Senior systemutvikler
DIPS AS
Telephone +47 75 59 24 06
Mobile +47 90 78 89 33


Fra: openEHR-clinical [mailto:openehr-clinical-boun...@lists.openehr.org] På 
vegne av Pablo Pazos
Sendt: 2. juli 2018 22:45
Til: For openEHR clinical discussions 
<openehr-clinical@lists.openehr.org<mailto:openehr-clinical@lists.openehr.org>>
Emne: Re: How to define transitions in the ISM

Hi Heather, thanks for the insight.

It seems this is a well known issue for clinical modelers.

I certainly agree with the criteria of the maximal dataset, IMO what makes a 
maximal dataset depends on the modelers interpretation of each specific use 
case. Of course less constraints allow a greater set of use cases to be 
considered, but also increases the work that needs to be done to fill the 
blanks between a generic archetype and a specific State Machine to be 
implemented. That negotiation that you mention is what I described as "extra 
metadata needs to be given for implementation".

In terms of the gap in modeling tools, I agree, technically archetype editors 
and template designers (Ocean and others) should be able to constraint the 
valid or invalid transitions. Then if modelers use or not those constraints, 
should depend on their criteria, not on limitations of modeling tools. On the 
other hand, this issue of modeling tools not supporting these constraints might 
be because in the RM, ISM_TRANSITION is not LOCATABLE (all classes that can be 
archetyped), but inherits from PATHABLE (RM 1.0.2 & 1.0.3). Considering this, 
it is a little inconsistent that the AE allows to create constraints for 
ACTION.ism_transition, but only for the ISM_TRANSITION.current_state and 
ISM_TRANSITION.careflow_step. but not ISM_TRANSITION.transition.

Maybe a solution form the RM is to make ISM_TRANSITION inherit from LOCATABLE, 
then update modeling tools to support it.

I will mention this to the SEC.


Best,
Pablo.


On Sun, Jul 1, 2018 at 4:21 AM, Heather Leslie 
<heather.les...@atomicainformatics.com<mailto:heather.les...@atomicainformatics.com>>
 wrote:
Hi Pablo,

Every archetype ideally needs to be designed for the maximal dataset and 
universal use case. The ACTION archetypes are no different.

But you have picked up on a major gap in our tooling at present – the modellers 
need the ability to be able to constrain the ACTION archetypes in templates for 
each use case:
•         to show what data points are relevant for each pathway step, and
•         which steps are relevant to our use case.

It is also not currently possible for modellers to record the proposed workflow 
or transitions in any template at present. This is another major gap and, in 
practice, is usually managed on a project by project basis a negotiated by the 
parties involved – verbally, word docs etc.

This is a relatively unexplored area where we need more tooling and/or 
standardised processes to communicate the requirements of the clinicians and 
intent of the modellers to the software engineers implementing systems.

No silver bullet here, yet. But open to collaborate with anyone who has 
suggestions…

Regards

Heather

From: openEHR-clinical 
<openehr-clinical-boun...@lists.openehr.org<mailto:openehr-clinical-boun...@lists.openehr.org>>
 On Behalf Of Pablo Pazos
Sent: Sunday, 1 July 2018 4:12 AM
To: For openEHR clinical discussions 
<openehr-clinical@lists.openehr.org<mailto:openehr-clinical@lists.openehr.org>>
Subject: Re: How to define transitions in the ISM

Hi Silje,

I got the issue with complex workflows.

With the current solution you'll need to provide more metadata to the 
developers so they can implement the correct workflows, like possible or 
impossible transitions from one state to another, because constraints are not 
in the archetype.

On the other hand, simple workflows can be completely specified in the 
archetype without providing extra medadata separately from the archetype, since 
both states and possible transitions can be specified there, like the little 
toy state machine on my previous message. The issue is the AE doesn't allow to 
express constraints for the ISM_TRANSITION.transition (DV_CODED_TEXT) attribute 
(a constraint that can explicitly state a list of valid transitions to reach 
that state, I think "transition" is about inbound transitions not outbound, but 
that is a separate issue). I'll test if this can be done using LinkEHR.

Also for complex flows, it would be good to provide the possible transitions, 
even if the list of possibilities is big, this is just to make the archetype 
contain all the metadata needed for implementation, without the need of 
providing that externally to the archetype. I know this requires more work in 
the archetype, but it might be less work in total, since the problem will need 
to be solved as you said, in the business logic. IMO this approach does not add 
more constraints to the archetype, just more information, and made the implicit 
freedom of transitions explicit.

Maybe this should be considered case by case, and modeling tools should allow 
to constraint the transition, but leave that to the modeler. I think a good 
approach is to constraint what can be constrained, for instance on the 
medication archetype there are a lot of transitions between active states, but 
maybe there are less transitions between other states, and those can be in the 
archetype. This would remove a little friction at development time.

It would be nice to know how other modelers do this and how other implementers 
deal with non defined transitions in ACTION archetypes.

Best,
Pablo.

On Wed, Jun 27, 2018 at 4:35 AM, Bakke, Silje Ljosland 
<silje.ljosland.ba...@nasjonalikt.no<mailto:silje.ljosland.ba...@nasjonalikt.no>>
 wrote:
Hi Pablo!

I’ll try to answer your question about how clinical modellers solve this 
problem. Have a look at the ACTION.medication archetype 
(http://openehr.org/ckm/#showArchetype_1013.1.123). This archetype has 11 
separate steps for the ACTIVE state. In each medication management context, one 
or more of these will be relevant, and often in a way or order that’s not 
possible to predict. We therefore “solve” the problem by leaving it to the 
business logic of the application. This may be frustrating for the implementers 
(I don’t know, is it?), but it makes our work manageable. Designing ACTION 
archetypes is complex in the first place, and I’m not sure we’d get any 
published if we needed to map out all possible combinations and orders of 
pathway steps too.

Regards,
Silje

From: openEHR-clinical 
<openehr-clinical-boun...@lists.openehr.org<mailto:openehr-clinical-boun...@lists.openehr.org>>
 On Behalf Of Pablo Pazos
Sent: Wednesday, June 27, 2018 3:45 AM
To: For openEHR clinical discussions 
<openehr-clinical@lists.openehr.org<mailto:openehr-clinical@lists.openehr.org>>
Subject: How to define transitions in the ISM

Hi all,

I'm testing the AE for a new workshop, and designed a simple state machine for 
and order so my students can use it as basic for more complex state machines.

I have: NEW (maps to ISM PLANNED), ASSIGNED (maps to ISM PLANNED), STARTED 
(maps to ISM ACTIVE) and FINISHED (maps to ISM COMPLETED).

What the AE is not allowing is to specify the ISM_TRANSITION.transition : 
DV_CODED_TEXT.

The problem is if I have two states mapped to ASSIGNED, how a software knows 
which one is the state to activate if the transition "initiate" is not define. 
Also I want to specify that from new should happen a "plan_step" transition to 
change the state to ASSIGNED. Seems we are missing important metadata in the 
archetype.

How do clinical modelers solve those problems?

Will test LinkEHR to see how they define the ISM and the valid transitions.

Thanks,
Pablo.

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