Tag Archive for: fast healthcare interoperability resources


History of HL7

In 1987, at the initiative of the IT company Simborg Systems, a non-profit organization was created to develop a new standard for improving the interaction of independent health information system (HIS).

Today, Health Level Seven International is a leading global provider of standards for the interoperability of medical information systems, accredited by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI).

The result of HL7’s work was the creation of three generations of standards.

HL7 V1

The first version of the HL7 standard (released in 1987) was intended only to test the concept and determine the content and structure of the standard. Actual use in production began with HL7 2.1 (1990).

HL7 V2

FHIR standardThe HL7 2.x (V2) standard describes the exchange of administrative, financial and clinical information in the form of text messages. These messages use a non-XML encoding syntax based on segments (lines) and one-character delimiters.

Messages are of various types and subtypes, for example, ADT – (Admit Discharge Transfer) messages for the transmission of administrative information about the visit, ORU message – for transmits observations and results.

HL7 v2.x has allowed for the interoperability between the following systems:

– Patient Administration Systems (PAS).

– Medical practice management (PMS) systems.

– Laboratory Information Systems (LIS).

– Electronic Medical Record (EMR) systems.

– Electronic Health Record (EHR) systems.

Dietary systems

Pharmacy systems

Billing systems

Most commonly used HL7 (v2) message types:

  • ACK – General acknowledgment message
  • ADT – Admission, Discharge and Transfer message
  • BAR – Add or change the billing account
  • DFT – Detailed financial transaction
  • MDM – Medical document management
  • MFN – Master files notification
  • ORM – Pharmacy/treatment order message
  • ORU – Observation result (unsolicited)
  • QRY – used to query source data systems about things like patient demographics, etc.
  • RAS – Pharmacy/treatment administration
  • RDE – Pharmacy/treatment encoded order message
  • RGV – Pharmacy/treatment give message
  • SIU – Scheduling information unsolicited

The development of new technologies led in 1995 to the development of a new generation of HL7 V3 standards that were not backward compatible with V2.

HL7 V3

HL7 V3, unlike V2, is a standard based on the Reference Information Model (HL7 RIM); data type model.

According to HL7 International: “The HL7 Reference Information Model (RIM) is a critical component of the HL7 V3 family of standards. It is the root of all information models and structures developed as part of the V3 development process”

Unfortunately, even though HL7 V3 was theoretically deeply and conceptually developed, the development of subject areas took too much time. Also, the complexity of the standard at the implementation stage caused a serious wave of criticism and several attempts to simplify the standard.

HL7 FHIR

HL7 FHIR appeared in 2011. The new HL7 FHIR development approach is based on RESTful principles. FHIR is designed to simplify and accelerate the implementation of HL7 with the goal of efficient interaction between legacy healthcare systems, as well as access to medical data from various devices (computers, tablets, mobile phones).

Why FHIR is Better

HL7 FHIR (Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources)The main idea of FHIR is to create a basic set of resources that, individually or in combination, can satisfy most use cases. FHIR resources define the content and structure of a core set of information that is common to most implementations.

FHIR Resources are divided into types and groups, each type has its own field structure, whose values can be primitive or composite types and links to other resources. Fields may be mandatory or optional, contain one or more values. For example, the “Patient” resource contains primitive type fields: date of birth / gender / …, composite type: name / address / …, links to the organization and the list of referring physicians, etc. Resources are based on the following structures:

  • XML
  • JSON
  • HTTP
  • Atom
  • OAuth

FHIR Data Exchange

HL7 Specification FHIR describes several approaches for exchanging data between systems. Systems can exchange resources separately or collect related resources into groups (Bundles) and exchange these resource groups (Bundles).

Data exchange options:

RESTful API (HTTP) – the interaction between systems occurs by performing operations on resources using REST requests.

Messaging – the interaction between systems is organized in the form of sending messages between systems. Each message contains information that one system wants to communicate to another. A message is a group of related resources of a certain type.

Documents – the interaction between systems occurs at the document level, i.e. one system requests documents from another system and receives them.

A document is a group of resources combined into a document through a special composition resource and secured at the time of signing the document.

Depending on the architecture of your solution and the tasks you are solving, you can use the appropriate exchange option.

FHIR 4

In January 2019, a new version of FHIR became available. In FHIR4 future changes will be backward compatible. Moreover, some key FHIR elements from now became normative, including RESTful API, XML and JSON formats, terminology layer, conformance framework, as well as Patient and Observation resources.

The FHIR standard and open application programming interfaces (APIs) are today considered critical elements to ensure the interoperability of medical data.

If you want to know more about HL7 Standard read our blog: Introduction to HL7 Standards (Health Level 7)

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This post was updated to reflect current trends and information.

The seamless exchange of health information between medical systems is crucial for improving patient care and operational efficiency. HL7 (Health Level 7) has become the leading international standard for the management and integration of clinical data. In this article, we will take a closer look at HL7, its key components, and how it supports healthcare data exchange. Additionally, we’ll cover HL7 FHIR, the latest version designed to enhance data interoperability in modern healthcare systems.

HL7 – Health information exchange

Digital transformation has affected many industries and processes. One of the processes affected is Health Information Exchange — HIE. It is evident, that effective exchange of medical data between various health institutions allows serving more people and could reduce the cost of treatment.

In this article, we will discuss the international standards for the transfer of clinical and administrative data Health Level 7 (HL7).

Health Information System (HIS)

Introduction to HL7 StandardsHealth service digitization has led to the creation of many Health Information System (HIS) which are systems to automate document management in a medical institution and consists of electronic medical records, data from various studies, monitoring from different medical devices related to the patient’s condition, and other information.

The focus of any Health Information System is the Electronic Health Records (EHR). The medical information stored in the EHR is represented by a complex set of heterogeneous data, both textual, digital, and graphics, which are originally located in different systems. For successful synchronization of this information in different HIS, it is necessary not only to transfer them via protocols, but also to convert this data to the form that is accepted in another Health Information System, and vice versa.

To solve Health Information Systems integration challenges, there is a set of international standards that define the rules for the exchange of information in the Healthcare Industry.

Health Information Exchange standards

It should be mentioned that over the past 50 years, many different standards for Health Information Exchange have been developed. The most Popular are:

However, by comparison all other, HL7 standard showed the best results and is currently the most common in the Healthcare Industry.

How is HL7 used in healthcare

The following is a comparative table of the functionality of the three standards:

 FUNCTION DICOM  UN/EDIFACT  HL7
 Hospital information system  X  X  X
 Radiology information  X  –  X
 Storage and sharing of images  X  –  X
 Master Patient Index (MPI)  –  –  X
 Graphic diagnosis  X  –  X
 Archiving  X  –  X
 Comments on the diagnosis  –  –  X
 Images in the documentation  X  –  X
 Intermediate reports  –  –  X
 Video in the documentation  –  –  X
 Patient registration  –  –  X
 Electronic health record (EHR)  X  X  X
 Invoice creation  –  X  X
 Recipes  –  –  X
 Transforming data  –  –  X
 Emergency information  –  –  X
 Medical practices  –  X  X

 

As you can see in the table above, HL7 Standard can transmit graphic images. This option was developed due to the specifics of the healthcare industry, since often during the examination and treatment of patients in addition to text, visual information is generated. This may include x-rays, ultrasound, and tomographic results, and the volume of visual graphics data is growing annually.

What is HL7 standard?

HL7 - Health information exchangeThe HL7 standard (Health Level 7) is the set of international standards for the exchange, management, and integration of electronic medical information.

Health Level Seven International (HL7) is not-for profit organizations that are developing standards for the integration, exchange, sharing, and retrieval of electronic health information. HL7 has more than 1,600 members from 50 countries, including over 500 corporate members such as healthcare providers, government agencies, pharmaceutical companies, and others.

The HL7 standard is widely used for electronic document exchange in medical institutions, especially in those where the patient receives intensive care, for example, in hospitals.

HL7 includes:

Objectives, concepts and general structure of HL7

In the HL7  “Seventh level” – an analogy with the highest level of the communication model of Open Systems Interconnection model (OSI). The seventh level supports the performance of such tasks as:

  • structuring the transmitted data;
  • system design capabilities;
  • achieving gear consistency;
  • security;
  • identification of participants;
  • availability

The most important components of HL7

RIM Reference Information Model

Reference Information Model – the basic concept for all HL7 is the information model – the main source of data content for all HL7 messages and documents.

RIM consists of several technologies:

  • USAM – Unified Service Action Model. An object model for any action possible in the system;
  • MIM – Message Information Model. Messages models;
  • R-MIM Refined Message Information Model. A context-based model.

Storyboard

Functional model in terms of system design UML. The concept of a storyboard is taken from the movie industry and represent significant moments of message transmission as frames. Each frame describes the key participants and their interaction. A set of frames represents both the transmission of a message and the functioning of a large system.

A description of the operation of triggers that launching events (for example, a form after filling out becomes “filled” and / or “signed”). Each interaction is described by a storyboard (in the UML sequence diagram).

Each interaction is described by a storyboard (in the UML sequence diagram). By means of RIM and storyboard, it is possible to express a highly personalized patient history.

Vocabulary

Descriptions of the specifics of subject areas. An attribute in a RIM-description can be a dictionary item.

HMD

Hierarchical Message Descriptor – determinant of the hierarchical structure of the message.

HMD principles:

  • The transmission system must understand the genesis of classes.
  • messages during transmission are arranged in a linear structured sequence.

EHR System

Electronic Health Record Systems – the system of electronic medical history. Description of the full functionality of the EHR consisting of sections:

  • Care Management
  • Clinical Support
  • Information Infrastructure – a total of 125 functions.

HL7 FHIR (Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources)

HL7 FHIR (Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources) The most popular version of HL7 standards is HL7 FHIR (Health Level 7 – Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources). According to HL7 International Annual report 2018 one of the strategic goals of this organization is: “Establish Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) as a primary standard for global health data interoperability and enhance and maintain quality of and accessibility to HL7 standards in current use”.

 

What is the difference between hl7 and FHIR?

HL7 FHIR combines all the successful solutions of previous versions of HL7 and contains a new architectural concept, as well as an open approach to the development and evolution of the standard.

Key principles of HL7 FHIR

  • focus on practical implementation (convenient for developers)
  • Following the evolving web technologies
  • Incorporating only the most important/common concepts into the specification to keep it small and describe 20% of the concepts involved in 80% of the informatized scenarios;
  • Open standard and Open Source development
  • Mandatory “human-readable data” level during the exchange.

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