In the evolving landscape of healthcare systems, ensuring adherence to clinical guidelines through order-sets remains a critical challenge, particularly when temporal dynamics influence decision-making processes. This conceptual manuscript introduces a novel framework for modeling guideline adherence as temporal logic constructs, enabling systematic conformance verification within order-set evaluation environments. By leveraging linear temporal logic (LTL) and computational tree logic (CTL) principles, the proposed system architecture facilitates the theoretical assessment of sequential and branching compliance pathways without relying on empirical data or simulations. Key components include a layered temporal abstraction module, a verification engine for detecting deviations in real-time clinical workflows, and a feedback topology that integrates governance constraints to mitigate potential risks. The framework emphasizes infrastructural uniqueness by incorporating a unique acronym, TCV-OS (temporal conformance verification for order-sets), with distinct layers for logic encoding, state monitoring, and adaptive reconciliation. Conceptual formulas are presented to interpret risk propagation across temporal states and decision confidence in adherence scenarios. This work synthesizes recent literature on temporal reasoning in medical decision support, highlighting gaps in current approaches and proposing architectural innovations for enhanced guideline orchestration. Ultimately, the framework offers a theoretical foundation for improving healthcare analytics integrity, fostering safer and more efficient order-set deployments in diverse clinical settings.