This
page
is
part
of
the
FHIR
Specification
(v4.3.0:
R4B
(v5.0.0-ballot:
R5
Ballot
-
STU
see
ballot
notes
).
The
current
version
which
supercedes
this
version
is
5.0.0
.
For
a
full
list
of
available
versions,
see
the
Directory
of
published
versions
.
Page
versions:
R5
R4B
R4
R3
R2
FHIR
Infrastructure
Work
Group
|
Maturity Level : N/A | Standards Status : Informative |
FHIR ( Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources ) is designed to enable information exchange to support the provision of healthcare in a wide variety of settings. The specification builds on and adapts modern, widely used RESTful practices to enable the provision of integrated healthcare across a wide range of teams and organizations.
The intended scope of FHIR is broad, covering human and veterinary, clinical care, public health, clinical trials, administration and financial aspects. The standard is intended for global use and in a wide variety of architectures and scenarios.
FHIR is based on "Resources" which are the common building blocks for all exchanges. Resources are an instance-level representation of some kind of healthcare entity. All resources have the following features in common :
Resource
instances
are
represented
as
either
XML
,
JSON
or
RDF
and
there
are
currently
140
153
different
resource
types
defined
in
the
FHIR
specification.
This specification describes a set of resources - that is, a set of resource types that describe the set of resource instances that can actually be exchanged. The term 'Resource' is sometimes used without clarifying whether it specifically refers to types or instances - the context of use makes this clear.
This is an example of how a patient is represented as a FHIR object in JSON . An XML encoding is also defined in the specification.
{"resourceType": "Patient","id" : "23434","meta" : {"versionId" : "12","lastUpdated" : "2014-08-18T15:43:30Z"}"text": {"status": "generated","div": "<!-- Snipped for Brevity -->"},"extension": [{"url": "http://example.org/consent#trials","valueCode": "renal"}],"identifier": [{"use": "usual","label": "MRN","system": "http://www.goodhealth.org/identifiers/mrn","value": "123456"}],"name": [{"family": "Levin","given": ["Henry"],"suffix": ["The 7th"]}],"gender": {"text": "Male"},"birthDate": "1932-09-24","active": true}
Each instance of a resource consists of:
Note that although this specification always shows the JSON properties in the order that they are defined, many JSON libraries order properties by other criteria.
All
resources
may
have
a
URL
that
identifies
the
resource
and
specifies
where
it
was/can
be
accessed
from.
This
URL
is
not
represented
inside
the
resource;
the
value
arises
in
a
context
use,
and
changes
as
copies
of
the
resource
are
made,
or
following
other
deployment/security
related
changes.
If
the
resource
is
accessed
via
the
FHIR
RESTful
API
(see
immediately
below)
then
the
URL
for
the
resource
is
[base]/[resourceType]/[id]
where
the
resourceType
and
id
come
from
the
resource
(see
above).
Some resources - those typically associated with formal publication cycles, rather than operational healthcare - have an explicit URL in them, which is normally the URL of master copy of the resource. This URL remains constant as the resource is copied across systems. See Canonical URLs for further information.
For manipulation of resources, FHIR provides a REST API with a rich but simple set of interactions:
The FHIR specification describes other kinds of exchanges beyond this simple RESTful API, including exchange of groups of resources as Documents , as Messages , and by using various types of Services .
There is a wide variation between different geo-political jurisdictions and segments of the healthcare industry, and no central authority to impose common business practices. Because of this, the FHIR specification defines an extension framework and defines a framework for managing variability .
Another key aspect of the variability encountered in healthcare is that the same information may be represented differently and with different levels of detail, granularity and nesting by various parties across the system. For example, in some cases a blood pressure measurement may be just a simple observation, a vital sign measure, while in other cases can be a rich set of highly defined data that includes things like controlled vocabularies for posture, exercise, etc. The resource types defined in this specification focus on the general, common use cases. Richer and more specific content can be supported and standardized by defining "profiles" on the base resource types.
Versions, in the context of FHIR, means one of three different things:
FHIR Version
Usually, the FHIR version is fixed by the context - the CapabilityStatement that a client can use to find out about the server, but there are other ways of managing multiple FHIR versions .
Record Version
FHIR Servers do not have to support versioning, though they are strongly encouraged to do so. There are three different levels of versioning support for FHIR servers:
In addition, servers may require that version aware updates are used, to prevent over-writing changes, but this is not described on this page.
Business Version
Some
resources
-
typically
those
that
represent
content
that
goes
through
a
formal
publishing
cycle
-
carry
a
version
element
that
explicitly
states
what
version
of
the
content
the
resource
represents.
This
is
changed
explicitly
by
a
human,
or
by
some
automated
process
in
accordance
with
applicable
business
rules.
To create a resource , send an HTTP POST request to the resource type's respective end point.
POST https://example.com/path/{resourceType}POST https://example.com/base/{resourceType}
In the example below we see the creation of a Patient.
POST /base/Patient HTTP/1.1Authorization: Bearer 37CC0B0E-C15B-4578-9AC1-D83DCED2B2F9Accept: application/fhir+jsonContent-Type: application/fhir+jsonContent-Length: 1198{"resourceType": "Patient",...(properties)}
Submit a new patient to the server, and ask it to store the patient with an id of its own choice.
Notes:
A response will contain an HTTP code 201 to indicate that the Resource has been created successfully. A location header indicates where the resource can be fetched in subsequent requests. The server may choose to return an OperationOutcome resource, but is not required to do so.
HTTP/1.1 201 CreatedContent-Length: 161Content-Type: application/fhir+jsonDate: Mon, 18 Aug 2014 01:43:30 GMTETag: W/"1"Location: http://example.com/base/Patient/347{"resourceType": "OperationOutcome","text": {"status": "generated","div": "<div xmlns=\"http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml\">The operation was successful</div>"}}
Notes:
is
strongly
recommended
but
not
required
For a variety of reasons, servers may need to return an error. Clients should be alert to authentication related responses, but FHIR content related errors should be returned using an appropriate HTTP status code, with an OperationOutcome resource to provide additional information. Here is an example of a server rejecting a resource because of server defined business rules:
HTTP/1.1 422 Unprocessable EntityContent-Length: 161Content-Type: application/fhir+jsonDate: Mon, 18 Aug 2014 01:43:30 GMT{"resourceType": "OperationOutcome","text": {"status": "generated","div": "<div xmlns=\"http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml\">MRN conflict- the MRN 123456 is already assigned to a different patient</div>"},}
Notes:
Reading a resource is done by sending HTTP GET requests to the desired Resource Type end-point.
GET https://example.com/path/{resourceType}/{id}GET https://example.com/base/{resourceType}/{id}
Here's an example.
GET /base/Patient/347?_format=xml HTTP/1.1Host: example.comAccept: application/fhir+xmlCache-Control: no-cache
Notes:
or
https://www.mnot.net/cache_docs/
The response to a GET contains the Resource.
HTTP/1.1 200 OKContent-Length: 729Content-Type: application/fhir+xmlLast-Modified: Sun, 17 Aug 2014 15:43:30 GMTETag: W/"1"<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><Patient xmlns="http://hl7.org/fhir"><id value="347"/><meta><versionId value="1"/><lastUpdated value="2014-08-17T15:43:30Z"/></meta><!-- content as shown above for patient --></Patient>
Notes:
In addition to getting single known resources it's possible to find a collection of resources by searching the resource type end-point with a set of criteria describing the set of resources that should be retrieved, and their order. The general pattern is:
GET https://example.com/path/{resourceType}?criteriaGET https://example.com/base/{resourceType}?criteria
The criteria is a set of HTTP parameters that specify which resources to return. The search operation
https://example.com/base/MedicationRequest?patient=347
returns all the prescriptions for the patient created above.
The response to a search request is a Bundle : a list of matching resources with some metadata:
HTTP/1.1 200 OKContent-Length: 14523Content-Type: application/fhir+xmlLast-Modified: Sun, 17 Aug 2014 15:49:30 GMT{"resourceType": "Bundle","type": "searchset","id" : "eceb4882-5c7e-4ca4-af62-995dfb8cef01""timestamp": "2014-08-19T15:49:30Z","total": "3","link": [{"relation" : "next","url" : "https://example.com/base/MedicationRequest?patient=347&searchId=ff15fd40-ff71-4b48-b366-09c706bed9d0&page=2"}, {"relation" : "self","url" : "https://example.com/base/MedicationRequest?patient=347"}],"entry": [{"resource" : {"resourceType": "MedicationRequest","id" : "3123","meta" : {"versionId" : "1","lastUpdated" : "2014-08-16T05:31:17Z"},... content of resource ...},},... 2 additional resources ....]}
Notes:
entry.resource.id
must
be
unique
in
the
bundle
The client sends the server a new version of the resource to replace the existing version - it PUTs it to the location of the existing resource:
PUT https://example.com/path/{resourceType}/{id}PUT https://example.com/base/{resourceType}/{id}
Note that there does not need to be a resource already existing at {id} - the server may elect to automatically create the resource at the specified address. Here is an example of updating a patient:
PUT /base/Patient/347 HTTP/1.1Host: example.comContent-Type: application/fhir+jsonContent-Length: 1435Accept: application/fhir+jsonIf-Match: 1{"resourceType": "Patient","id" : "347","meta" : {"versionId" : "1","lastUpdated" : "2014-08-18T15:43:30Z"},...}
Notes:
The response to an update request has metadata / status, and optionally an OperationOutcome:
HTTP/1.1 200 OKContent-Length: 161Content-Type: application/fhir+jsonDate: Mon, 18 Aug 2014 01:43:30 GMTETag: W/"2"Location: https://example.com/base/Patient/347/_history/2{"resourceType": "OperationOutcome","text": {"status": "generated","div": "<div xmlns=\"http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml\">The operation was successful</div>"}}
Notes:
Here is an example that shows all the information found in all resources, fully populated:
{"resourceType" : "X","id" : "12","meta" : {"versionId" : "12","lastUpdated" : "2014-08-18T15:43:30Z","profile" : ["http://example-consortium.org/fhir/profile/patient"],"security" : [{"system" : "http://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem/v3-ActCode","code" : "EMP"}],"tag" : [{"system" : "http://example.com/codes/workflow","code" : "needs-review"}]},"implicitRules" : "http://example-consortium.org/fhir/ehr-plugins","language" : "X"}
Implementers notes:
profile
,
security
and
tag
)
The base properties of all resources are defined on the resource types Resource and DomainResource .
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