Some leading organization Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources
(FHIR) standard for the last six years. By now, it’s clear to me that
FHIR will shape the future of healthcare IT. The problem is, most
healthcare technology professionals tend to overlook some key FHIR
facts.
You won’t be able to use FHIR to benefit patients unless you truly understand it.
Here’s what everyone in health tech must know about FHIR and its potential to advance interoperability.
What Is FHIR?
FHIR is a specification for healthcare data exchange developed by
Health Level Seven
(HL7), the same organization that developed the ubiquitous HL7 v2
messaging standard. FHIR was built with modern web technologies that are
already being used in other industries, and it’s focused on simplifying
system integrations with well-defined data models and application
programming interfaces (APIs) to improve interoperability.
Historically, long health IT development cycles, high costs and domain
complexity limited innovation in the industry. FHIR has the potential to
change the status quo and accelerate innovation by breaking down data
silos, lowering development costs and cutting development time to enable
an ecosystem of modern, connected
healthcare solutions.
Fact 1: FHIR is not just a specification.
FHIR is so much more. It is a community of highly active health
information technology experts who have gotten together to solve complex
health technology problems. Anybody can join this community — they just
register at
chat.fhir.org,
and within minutes they can start communicating with the leaders of the
FHIR community such as Grahame Grieve, Lloyd McKenzie and Josh Mandel.
There are also offline events that provide a chance to engage with the
community. HL7 (Health Level 7) organizes three FHIR connectathons every year, right before the general group meetings.
Fact 2: The FHIR specification consists of two parts.
The first part of the specification describes how to represent clinical
and financial information as FHIR resources. The second part describes
paradigms of data exchange, such as how one system can query data from
another system through the REST API, how two systems can exchange data
via messaging, and how to combine multiple FHIR resources into
documents.
Fact 3: HL7 FHIR has exceptional traction.
FHIR is supported by many stakeholders in the industry. The governments
of the United States, Canada, Australia, Europe and other countries are
working on FHIR projects. Major electronic health record (EHR) vendors
such as Epic and Cerner have already implemented FHIR APIs and opened
their FHIR application stores. In the pharmaceutical industry, there is a
consortium of companies called Transcelerate
that has participated in every FHIR connectathon in the last two years.
Medical insurance companies have started a project called Da Vinci
to accelerate FHIR adoption. The project has brought together a
significant number of medical insurance companies, and they are working
on FHIR use cases for the medical insurance industry. Large hospital
systems have started developing SMART on FHIR applications to supplement
their EHR systems with additional functionality.
Fact 4: The HL7 FHIR specification is open source.
FHIR is available to anyone, at any moment, without any fees. This is
important, but aside from the availability of the specification, the
fact that FHIR is open source sets up a very good trend toward producing
open-source solutions around FHIR. The FHIR community has already
developed many open-source tools and libraries that engineers from
different companies can benefit from. It doesn't matter what kind of
technology you’re using — you will find components that support your
development.
Fact 5: FHIR makes integrations much easier.
It’s pretty obvious to anyone if you think about integration with other
solutions that support HL7 FHIR. However, in any given health system,
there exists many legacy interoperability standards. You will find many
HL7 v2 implementations and see many CCD documents. Thankfully, FHIR
makes integrations with legacy system easier even then because FHIR has a
well-documented mapping between FHIR and legacy interoperability
standards. Also, the FHIR community has produced many tools and
libraries that support data translation from HL7 v2 to FHIR, from CCD to
FHIR, etc. So integrations are much easier with FHIR, even if FHIR
isn’t implemented in all systems yet.
Fact 6: FHIR introduces a new type of architecture to healthcare.
FHIR introduces application stores and microservices architecture. Look
at the legacy systems implemented in the current healthcare
organization, and it’s clear that most of them are large monolithic
systems that try to serve every function, to every user. As a result,
these systems take a very long time to implement and update. FHIR
enables an ecosystem of connected healthcare applications developed by
different vendors. Soon organizations will be able to choose the best
components developed by different companies and bring them together into
an ecosystem of connected healthcare applications. These organizations
will be able to replace solutions developed by one company with
solutions developed by another company without spending a significant
amount of time and money on integration.
Fact 7: FHIR is not just great for exchanging healthcare data.
The most overlooked fact about FHIR is actually my favorite feature of
FHIR. All the health technology experts understand well that FHIR can be
used for accessing data inside some legacy systems through the FHIR
API, but there is another amazing use case for FHIR. It is also great
for storage and analytics and can be used as a backend data model for
building new healthcare solutions. At Health Samurai, we recognized this
use case several years ago and nowadays, our main product is the FHIR
backend, which we use for the development of solutions for our clients.
Here are some lessons learned: When using a FHIR backend, value creation
comes faster because organizations don't have to spend that much time
on the backend. FHIR solutions are future proof, and they’re
interoperable. Also, onboarding new engineers is much easier. There’s no
need to explain to them data structures; instead, just refer them to
the
FHIR Mirth .
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