PCD File and Document Management

From IHE Wiki
Revision as of 18:00, 17 October 2021 by Jrhoads (talk | contribs) (FTP site gone, content migrated to Google Drive)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

PCD Home

General file and document storage conventions

The following sections give a quick guide to PCD usage. A more extensive and general description of general IHE practices can be found at Tool Usage.

Wiki

The wiki site you are looking at (wiki.ihe.net) is the most generally useful source of IHE information. The category pages and Category: PCD Meeting will lead you, directly or indirectly, to most of the IHE PCD information you will need.

You should learn your way around the wiki, and in particular you should learn to edit pages to add your own insights and information! See the Help pages (left hand navigation panel) for the simple directions. Don't be timid, the wiki doesn't lose anything so the worst than can happen in a disastrous editing session is that the page can be quickly and easily reverted to its previous state.M

Note in particular that you can upload and incorporate images in the pages. Pictures are great for getting your ideas accross and making the pages look more interesting.

Besides graphics files, you can also upload PDF files, a good way to give your colleagues access to information of long-term usefulness. Most other file formats cannot be uploaded to the wiki (such as Word .doc files). For these, the FTP site is a more appropriate place.

FTP site

The FTP site has been discontinued. It is no longer accessible. Its content has been migrated to Google Drive.

Google Groups

Each working group in PCD has a Google Group (see IHE PCD Google Groups for a list). If you are not yet enrolled in a Google Group for one of your Google groups, the web site will give you a chance to request being put in the group. The group administrator will add you in, usually the same day.

The Google Group gives you a way to address emails to the whole group, and also allows you to upload working files for the group.

The PCD consensus seems to be that while a working group is preparing the file for wider circulation, it is reasonable to work with it on the Google Groups File page; when it is ready for the wider PCD community, you should load it into the appropriate folder in the FTP site. The recommended way to do this is to email the document to one of the co-chairs or Manny Furst, who will take care of that.

Naming convention for file names-IHE-PCD

(This description is based on an earlier document, revised 11/30/2005, with minor corrections)

In order to track documents through multiple versions and changing names we have adopted the following convention. This convention is in preparation for Proposed Profile name changes – e.g., two profiles may be combined or a profile may be split into two. The naming convention will work for other documents, but may not necessarily require version numbers.


Document File Names (YYYYMMDDFileName-Version-Initials)

Document file names begin with the date (YYYYMMDD) of the first document to have this name. If the name is changed the date will be updated. To provide ways to easily track changes:

  1. The Profile Tracking Table will be updated by the chair (for Year 1 this is a spreadsheet at ftp://ftp.ihe.net/Patient_Care_Devices/IHEPCDyr1-2006-2007/PlanningCommitteeYr1/YYYYMMDDProfileTrackingTable-Vn-THC.xls), where n is the version.
  2. If the Profile Proposal supersedes earlier proposal(s) the author should provide the previous document’s name near the top of the profile.
  3. If the document is not a profile, follow this convention to the extent it is relevant.
  4. The exception to this convention is for documents placed in a meeting folder (see below).


Use an abbreviated form of the document title to follow the date the profile was created with this name. The version number follows. Versions begin again at 1 if the name changes. The author’s initials (iii) complete the naming convention (please use 3 initials if you are comfortable doing so).

The result is: YYYYMMDDProfileProposal-Vi-iii

We ask that you use:

  • Capitals to start words and avoid spaces
  • The hyphen ( - ) rather than underscore ( _ ) for clarity

Please leave the originals in the ftp folder to provide an historical record; a committee co-chair has the responsibility to remove or archive older documents.

Example:

Proposed Profile: Access vital signs from any location, view and process vital signs from any location

The file name becomes: 20051109VitalSignsMonitor-v1-BM.doc

After receiving comments and participating in committee discussion, the next version with the same name would be labeled and posted by the author as:

20051109AccessVitalSigns-v2-BM

Note: the date at the beginning of the file name is unchanged.

If the document’s name were to change, then the file name will change and the date that begins the file name will also change. For example:

(for illustration only) 20060122AccessPhysiologic Data-v1-BM

Note to profile authors: When a name change occurs, the profile itself should include a record of this change with an entry near the top of the newly named document to refer to the preceding document. In addition, an entry in the Notes column of the tracking table, YYYYMMDDProfileTrackingTable-Vn-iii.xls. When a new profile or a new version is posted to the ftp site, please notify the committee through the listserv.

Please note: while everyone with access to the file can copy/download any document, modify it and distribute it as an attachment to emails (e.g., distributed over the committee listserv), only the author should edit the original and post the latest version.

Agendas and Supporting Documents

The Agendas, Meeting Minutes, and Action Items for meetings can be found in the following areas.

This will include Planning Committee, Technical Committee, and individual working group pages.

  • Current meetings (typically the last 6 months): Category:PCD_Meeting page.
  • Older meetings (May 2008 - current meetings): Go to the meeting main page Category:PCD_Meeting. It contains links to archived meetings grouped by year.
  • Even older meetings: