Release 5 Ballot

This page is part of the FHIR Specification (v0.0.82: DSTU (v5.0.0-ballot: R5 Ballot - see ballot notes 1). ). 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

A central challenge for healthcare standards is how to handle variability caused by diverse healthcare processes. Over time, more fields and optionality are added to the specification, gradually adding cost and complexity to the resulting implementations. The alternative is relying on custom extensions, but these create many implementation problems too. FHIR solves this challenge by defining a simple framework for extending and adapting the existing resources. All systems, no matter how they are developed, can easily read these extensions
Biomedical Research and extension definitions can be retrieved using the same framework as retrieving other resources. In addition, each resource carries a human-readable text representation using html as a fallback display option for clinical safety. This is particularly important for complex clinical information where many systems take a simple textual/document based approach. Regulation icon 1.7.3 Work Group Maturity Level : N/A Standards Status : Informative Security Category : Business Compartments : Not linked to any defined compartments
Example Resource: Patient This simple Name id Format
Placeholder example shows the important parts of a resource: a local extension, the human readable HTML presentation, and the standard defined data content. FHIR has resources for administrative concepts such as patient, provider, organization and device as well as a wide variety of clinical concepts covering problems, medications, diagnostics, care plans, financial concerns and more. 1.7.4 example XML The FHIR development process JSON Turtle
 

FHIR is published as a Draft Standard for Trial Use. During the Trial Use phase, HL7 actively monitors implementations in order to continue Usage note: every effort has been made to improve ensure that the specification, examples are correct and is able to be responsive to their needs. Due to the many advantages FHIR offers, trial use is already beginning right now. Following this, HL7 will develop FHIR as useful, but they are not a full normative specification, most likely through 2015. http://www.hl7.org/fhir . Follow us on Twitter using #FHIR part of the specification.

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