Abstract

BackgroundThe International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) is a classification of health and health-related states developed by the World Health Organization (WHO) to provide a standard and unified language to be used as a reference model for the description of health and health-related states. The concept of functioning on which ICF is based is that of a “dynamic interaction between a person’s health condition, environmental factors and personal factors”. This overall model has been translated into a classification covering all the main components of functioning. However, the practical use of ICF has highlighted some formal problems, mainly concerning conceptual clarity and ontological coherence.MethodsIn the present work, we propose an initial ontological formalization of ICF beyond its current status, focusing specifically on the interaction between activities and participation and environmental factors. The formalization has been based on ontology engineering methods to drive goal and scope definition, knowledge acquisition, selection of an upper ontology for mapping, conceptual model definition and evaluation, and finally representation using the Ontology Web Language (OWL).ResultsA conceptual model has been defined in a graphical language that included 202 entities, when possible mapped to the SUMO upper ontology. The conceptual model has been validated against 60 case studies from the literature, plus 6 ad-hoc case studies. The model has been then represented using OWL.ConclusionsThis formalization might provide the basis for a revision of the ICF classification in line with current efforts made by WHO on the International Classification of Diseases and on the International Classification of Health Interventions.

Highlights

  • The International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) is a classification of health and healthrelated states developed by the World Health Organization (WHO) since 2001 [1]

  • The two ICF components Activities&Participation and Environmental Factors were thoroughly analyzed and compared to BioTop and SUMO upper level ontologies; SUMO was chosen as the reference ontology

  • The models were initially conceived at conceptual level, represented with a non-formal visual language (VOWL2), and were validated before formalization

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Summary

Introduction

The International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) is a classification of health and healthrelated states developed by the World Health Organization (WHO) since 2001 [1]. The description of the functioning states takes into account factors affecting them, giving a biopsychosocial model of disability, seen as a combination of two sets of factors, physical (body functions and structures, with their impairments) and contextual (environmental and personal factors, seen with the role of facilitators or barriers), that can limit activity and restrict participation in social life This overall model has been translated into a classification covering all the main components of functioning. The concept of functioning on which ICF is based is that of a “dynamic interaction between a person’s health condition, environmental factors and personal factors” The practical use of ICF has highlighted some formal problems, mainly concerning conceptual clarity and ontological coherence

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