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Assessment & Diagnosis Standards

Your diagnosis drives treatment decisions, follow-up planning, continuity of care, and national reporting. A vague or uncoded diagnosis limits every downstream use of the data — from the next clinician to MOH surveillance dashboards. A good assessment should be specific enough for another clinician to continue care without guessing your clinical reasoning.

This page information supports: SNOMED-CT ICD-10 ISO 18308

Complements Clinical Coding

This page focuses on clinical content quality in assessments. For how to select and save SNOMED CT codes, see Clinical Coding. For the step-by-step click path, see How to Add a Coded Diagnosis.


The Six Checks

Before saving any diagnosis or assessment, confirm these six items:

Specific
Not just a symptom — name the condition
Qualified
Include chronicity, severity, control, complications
Labelled
Working vs Final clearly stated
Reasoned
Assessment includes reasoning, differential, risk
Coded
SNOMED CT selected, mapped to ICD-10
Current
Updated when new results change the picture
Minimum Standard
  • Every diagnosis must be clinically meaningful, not only a symptom label
  • Uncertainty must be stated clearly as working, provisional, or differential
  • Assessment must include the reason for the diagnosis and the reason for the plan
  • Active problems that affect today's care should be coded and kept current

Vague vs Specific

⛔ Avoid✅ Prefer❓ Why It Is Better
DiabetesType 2 diabetes mellitus, uncontrolledGuides intensity of management and follow-up
URTIAcute viral upper respiratory tract infectionSignals likely aetiology and reduces unnecessary antibiotics
GastritisAcute gastritis with epigastric painCaptures symptom + diagnosis together
Back painAcute mechanical low back pain, no radiculopathyDocuments key negative that changes management
HypertensionEssential hypertension, Stage 2Supports risk stratification and targets
FeverAcute febrile illness, dengue warning signs absentCaptures working condition and risk assessment
The Specificity Test

If you can answer "what type, how severe, how long, which side, controlled or not, complications or not" in one line, your diagnosis is usually at the right level.


Diagnosis Qualifiers

Include qualifiers only when they add clinical value:

Chronicity
Acute, chronic, acute exacerbation
Severity
Mild, moderate, severe (when relevant)
Laterality / Site
Right, left, bilateral, anatomical location
Control Status
Controlled, uncontrolled, poorly controlled
Complications
With or without (e.g., nephropathy)
Aetiology
Viral, bacterial, traumatic, medication-induced

Working vs Final Diagnosis

Working (Provisional)

Use when diagnosis is not yet confirmed but you need to start management.

  • Label explicitly as Working diagnosis or Provisional
  • Put the most likely diagnosis first
  • Add differentials you are actively considering
  • State what will confirm or refute it (tests, response to treatment)
  • Update once evidence changes
Working vs Final Diagnosis

Working diagnosis: Acute appendicitis (RLQ pain, fever, leukocytosis)
Differential: Mesenteric adenitis, ovarian pathology
Plan: Surgical review + imaging. Will update diagnosis after results.

Final

Use when evidence is sufficient and uncertainty is resolved.

  • Use a specific diagnostic term
  • Ensure correct SNOMED-CT coding + mapping to ICD-10
  • Reference key supportive results if relevant
  • Keep previous working diagnoses updated so the record does not contain unresolved uncertainty
Current CCMS Iteration

SystmOne free text consultation does not have a dedicated Working vs Final diagnosis column. Use a code prefix: [Working Diagnosis] + [Disease Code], or if final, use [Disease Code] directly.


What Good Assessment Documentation Looks Like

Assessment is your synthesis. It answers: Why this diagnosis? Why this plan? What risks did you consider?

  • Clinical impression: severity and trajectory (stable, improving, worsening)
  • Reasoning: key positives and key negatives that support your conclusion
  • Differential (when relevant): what else was considered and why less likely
  • Problem list: prioritised active problems
  • Risk & safety net: red flags present/absent, who to escalate to, when to return

Template Snippet

Assessment Template

Chief complaint: SNOMED CT code (mandatory)

Presenting history:

Assessment:

  • Clinical impression:
  • Reasoning (supports / against):
  • Differential:
  • Problem list (priority):

Management Plan:

Risk + safety-net:


Example: Complete vs Inadequate

Same patient, same complaint — two very different notes. Read both and notice what the second one leaves the next clinician to guess.

Example 1: Acute Case

Complete Documentation
55M, central chest pain × 2h28 May 2026

Chief complaint:

  • Central chest pain × 2 hrs (SNOMED 29857009)
  • Character of chest pain: pricking, radiating etc.

Assessment:

  • Alert conscious pink, GCS 15/15
  • Lungs clear, equal AE
  • CVS DRNM
  • ECG: ST elevation II, III, aVF, no reciprocal ST depression

Diagnosis/Clinical impression:

  • Dx: Suspected ACS
  • Intermediate-risk ACS — typical pressure-like pain, smoker, age >45
  • Differential: GERD, musculoskeletal

Plan: Aspirin 300mg stat. Urgent refer ED for serial troponin & observation.

Inadequate Documentation
55M, central chest pain × 2h28 May 2026

Pt c/o chest pain. Looks comfortable, vitals stable.

ECG done — no acute changes.

T. Paracetamol 1g PO given. Pain settled.

Discharged. Follow up if worse.

The second note doesn't say what was ruled out, what would trigger escalation, why pain looked benign, or what happens if it isn't. The next clinician inherits the uncertainty.

Example 2: Chronic Follow-Up

Complete Documentation NCD
58F, T2DM 3-monthly review28 May 2026

Chief complaint: Chronic disease monitoring

Clinical Impression:

  • T2DM with nephropathy, poorly controlled — HbA1c 9.2% (↑ from 8.4%), eGFR 45, ACR 35
  • Reasoning: Persistent hyperglycemia despite adherence to meds.
  • Key negatives: No hypoglycemia episodes, no foot ulcers
  • Problem: 1) T2DM with nephropathy, poorly controlled 2) Hypertension (BP 148/92)

Plan:

  • DM: Increase MTF to 850mg TDS (eGFR 45, acceptable).
  • BP: Start Amlodipine 5mg OD. Target less than 130/80.
  • Refer: Dietitian for T2DM education. Fundoscopy due (last >12mo).
  • Ix: Repeat HbA1c & renal profile in 3/12.

Safety net: Return immediately if vomiting, reduced urine, or confusion. Hypoglycemia symptoms & action explained.

Inadequate Documentation
58F, T2DM 3-monthly review28 May 2026

DM follow up. BP high. Continue Metformin and Glipizide.

FU 3/12. Diet advice given.


Key Takeaways

Be Specific
Name the condition, not only the symptom
Label Uncertainty
Working, provisional, differential, or final
Show Reasoning
Assessment explains why this diagnosis and plan
Code Correctly
Use SNOMED CT and keep mapping clean
Capture Risk
Document red flags, key negatives, and escalation
Update Evidence
Revise diagnosis when results change the picture

Contributor

Dr Fuad Jaafar

Dr Fuad Jaafar

Facilitator, CCMS • KK Bandar Maharani

84 contributions

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