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R2
7.17.4
7.18.4
Clinical
Document
Architecture
(CDA)
on
FHIR
CDA
on
FHIR
specifies
how
to
implement
CDA
R2
with
the
FHIR
Composition
resource.
The
original
HL7
Clinical
Document
Architecture
(CDA)
defined
the
structure
and
semantics
of
"clinical
documents"
for
the
purpose
of
exchange.
A
clinical
document
is
a
documentation
of
clinical
observations
and
services,
with
the
following
characteristics:
Persistence
-
A
clinical
document
continues
to
exist
in
an
unaltered
state,
for
a
time
period
defined
by
local
and
regulatory
requirements
(NOTE:
There
is
a
distinct
scope
of
persistence
for
a
clinical
document,
independent
of
the
persistence
of
any
XML-encoded
CDA
document
instance).
Stewardship
-
A
clinical
document
is
maintained
by
an
organization
entrusted
with
its
care.
Potential
for
authentication
-
A
clinical
document
is
an
assemblage
of
information
that
is
intended
to
be
legally
authenticated.
Context
-
A
clinical
document
establishes
the
context
for
its
contents.
Wholeness
-
Authentication
of
a
clinical
document
applies
to
the
whole
and
does
not
apply
to
portions
of
the
document
without
the
full
context
of
the
document.
Human
readability
-
A
clinical
document
is
human
readable.
A
CDA
document
on
FHIR
is
a
defined
and
complete
information
object
that
can
include
text,
images,
sounds,
and
other
multimedia
content.
7.17.4.2
7.18.4.2
Scope
of
the
CDA
on
FHIR
The
scope
of
CDA
on
FHIR
is
the
standardization
of
clinical
documents
for
exchange.
The
data
format
of
clinical
documents
outside
of
the
exchange
context
(e.g.
the
data
format
used
to
store
clinical
documents)
is
not
addressed
in
this
specification.
CDA
on
FHIR
does
not
specify
the
creation
or
management
of
documents,
only
their
exchange
markup.
While
it
may
be
possible
to
directly
use
the
CDA
Schema
in
a
document
authoring
environment,
such
use
is
not
the
primary
purpose
of
the
CDA
specification.
Document
management
is
critically
interdependent
with
the
CDA
specifications,
but
the
specification
of
document
management
messages
is
outside
the
scope
of
the
CDA.
7.17.4.3
7.18.4.3
Goals
and
Design
Principles
The
goals
of
CDA
on
FHIR
are:
Give
priority
to
delivery
of
patient
care.
Allow
cost
effective
implementation
across
as
wide
a
spectrum
of
systems
as
possible.
Support
exchange
of
human-readable
documents
between
users,
including
those
with
different
levels
of
technical
sophistication.
Promote
longevity
of
all
information
encoded
according
to
this
architecture.
Enable
a
wide
range
of
post-exchange
processing
applications.
Be
compatible
with
a
wide
range
of
document
creation
applications.
Promote
exchange
that
is
independent
of
the
underlying
transfer
or
storage
mechanism.
Prepare
the
design
reasonably
quickly.
Enable
policy-makers
to
control
their
own
information
requirements
without
extension
to
this
specification.
Several
design
principles
follow
from
consideration
of
the
above
goals:
This
architecture
must
be
compatible
with
XML
and
JSON.
This
architecture
must
be
compatible
with
representations
of
clinical
information
arising
from
other
HL7
committees.
Technical
barriers
to
the
use
of
the
architecture
should
be
minimized.
The
architecture
specifies
the
representation
of
instances
required
for
exchange.
The
architecture
should
impose
minimal
constraints
or
requirements
on
document
structure
and
content
required
for
exchange.
The
architecture
must
be
scalable
to
accommodate
fine-grained
markup
such
as
highly
structured
text
and
coded
data.
Document
specifications
based
on
this
architecture
should
accommodate
such
constraints
and
requirements
as
supplied
by
appropriate
professional,
commercial,
and
regulatory
agencies.
Document
specifications
for
document
creation
and
processing,
if
intended
for
exchange,
should
map
to
this
exchange
architecture.
CDA
documents
must
be
human
readable
using
widely-available
and
commonly-deployed
XML-aware
browsers
and
print
drivers
and
a
generic
CDA
style
sheet
written
in
a
standard
style
sheet
language.
Use
open
standards.
7.17.4
7.18.4
General
CDA
on
FHIR
Concepts
7.17.4.1
7.18.4.1
Major
Components
of
a
CDA
on
FHIR
Document
This
section
serves
as
a
high-level
introduction
to
the
major
components
of
a
CDA
document,
all
of
which
are
described
again
and
in
greater
detail
later
on.
The
intent
here
is
to
familiarize
the
reader
with
the
high-level
concepts
to
facilitate
an
understanding
of
the
sections
that
follow.
[EDITORS:
in
CDA
r2
there
is
a
bunch
of
detail
about
how
CDA
is
wrapped
-
and
an
example.
Consider
whether
the
discussion
is
relevant
here:
"A
CDA
document
is
wrapped
by
the
<ClinicalDocument>
element,
and
contains
a
header..."]
7.17.4.2
7.18.4.2
Human
Readability
and
Rendering
CDA
Documents
The
CDA
requirement
for
human
readability
guarantees
that
a
receiver
of
a
CDA
document
can
algorithmically
display
the
clinical
content
of
the
note
on
a
standard
Web
browser.
There
must
be
a
deterministic
way
for
a
recipient
of
an
arbitrary
CDA
document
to
render
the
attested
content.
Human
readability
shall
not
require
a
sender
to
transmit
a
special
style
sheet
along
with
a
CDA
document.
It
must
be
possible
to
render
all
CDA
documents
with
a
single
style
sheet
and
general-market
display
tools.
Human
readability
applies
to
the
authenticated
content.
There
may
be
additional
information
conveyed
in
the
document
that
is
there
primarily
for
machine
processing
that
is
not
authenticated
and
need
not
be
rendered.
When
structured
content
is
derived
from
narrative,
there
must
be
a
mechanism
to
describe
the
process
(e.g.
by
author,
by
human
coder,
by
natural
language
processing
algorithm,
by
specific
software)
by
which
machine-processable
portions
were
derived
from
a
block
of
narrative.
When
narrative
is
derived
from
structured
content,
there
must
be
a
mechanism
to
identify
the
process
by
which
narrative
was
generated
from
structured
data.
These
principles
and
requirements
have
led
to
the
current
approach,
where
the
material
to
be
rendered
is
placed
into
the
Section.content.
[EDITORS:
The
current
design
doesn't
make
it
clear
where
to
consistently
find
narrative.]