International Classification of Diseases and Injuries: 11th Issue Launched By WHO

International Classification of Diseases and Injuries

The World Health Organization launches the eleventh edition of the International Classification of Diseases and Injuries (ICD-11), now fully updated and including a more systematic and extensive classification of injuries caused by accidents and acts of violence.

ICD-11 now includes all the elements that injury researchers proposed over the past two decades, supported by EuroSafe. The injury-section within ICD-11 is presented into a multi-axial framework and designed to allow several codes to be combined ('clustered') to describe injury-cases.

History of ICD

ICD is the foundation for the identification of health trends and statistics globally, and the international standard for reporting diseases and health conditions. It is the diagnostic classification standard for all clinical and research purposes. ICD defines the universe of diseases, disorders, injuries and other related health conditions, listed in a comprehensive, hierarchical fashion that allows for:

  • easy storage, retrieval and analysis of health information for evidenced-based decision-making;
  • sharing and comparing health information between hospitals, regions, settings and countries; and
  • data comparisons in the same location across different time periods.

Uses include monitoring of the incidence and prevalence of diseases, observing reimbursements and resource allocation trends, and keeping track of safety and quality guidelines. They also include the counting of deaths as well as diseases, injuries, symptoms, reasons for encounter, factors that influence health status, and external causes of disease.

The first international classification edition, known as the International List of Causes of Death, was adopted by the International Statistical Institute in 1893. WHO was entrusted with the ICD at its creation in 1948. The ICD has been revised and published in a series of editions to reflect advances in health and medical science over time. The current ICD-10 was endorsed in May 1990 by the Forty-third World Health Assembly. It is cited in more than 20,000 scientific articles and used by more than 100 countries around the world.

A version of ICD-11 was released on 18 June 2018 to allow Member States to prepare for implementation, including translating ICD into their national languages. ICD-11 will be submitted to the 144th Executive Board Meeting in January 2019 and the Seventy-second World Health Assembly in May 2019 and, following endorsement, Member States will start reporting using ICD-11 on 1 January 2022.

More information: http://www.who.int/classifications/icd/en/