This
page
is
part
of
the
FHIR
Specification
(v4.0.1:
R4
(v4.3.0:
R4B
-
Mixed
Normative
and
STU
)
in
it's
permanent
home
(it
will
always
be
available
at
this
URL).
).
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
R4B
R4
R3
R2
FHIR
Infrastructure
Work
Group
|
Maturity Level : 2 | Standards Status : Trial Use |
|
This
page
and
the
RDF
forms
are
jointly
maintained
by
the
HL7
FHIR
project
and
the
W3C
Semantic
Web
Health
Care
and
Life
Sciences
Interest
Group
|
FHIR
resources
can
be
represented
as
an
RDF
graph
serialized
in
the
Turtle
format
.
The
RDF
format
is
defined
to
assist
the
process
of
bridging
between
operational
data
exchange
and
formal
knowledge
processing
systems.
While
the
RDF
form
offers
a
fully
functional
representation
of
FHIR
resources,
it
has
different
operational
characteristics
from
the
JSON
and
XML
representations,
and
would
be
implemented
for
different
reasons.
Systems
focused
on
operational
exchange
of
data
would
not
generally
choose
to
use
RDF.
This page describes:
Most of the major pieces of FHIR/RDF are now available in a complete enough form for developers to start trying them and providing feedback. Work still needed includes:
to
translate
other
RDF
data
(non-FHIR)
to/from
FHIR/RDF
This page documents an RDF format that can be used to exchange FHIR data, on the basis that RDF is a universal information representation. Using RDF enables FHIR data to be used with RDF-aware applications to support inference, shared semantics across multiple standards and data formats, data integration, semantic data validation, compliance enforcement, SPARQL queries and other uses. Implementers using FHIR in this fashion should be aware of the relationship between the RDF format the wider use of ontologies.
The
RDF
format
is
based
on
the
same
abstract
information
model
as
the
XML
and
JSON
formats
and
carries
the
same
information
content.
Resources
are
losslessly
round-trippable
between
XML,
JSON
and
RDF
formats
and
data
expressed
in
the
RDF
format
corresponds
closely
to
the
XML
and
JSON
formats
in
its
look
and
feel.
However,
there
are
a
few
additional
terms
that
may
appear
in
the
RDF
format,
which
are
explained
below:
fhir:nodeRole
,
fhir:treeRoot
,
fhir:value
,
fhir:index
and
fhir:concept
.
ShEx
schemas
are
available
that
describe
the
RDF
format.
In addition to defining the RDF format, this specification provides an associated ontology that provides formal definitions for the relationships that appear in the RDF format. Ontologies that were designed independently almost always have some impedance mismatch when attempting to use them together. Many of the ontologies in the medical and life sciences domain are designed to capture facts about the world for research, such as the fact that the mitral valve is a kind of heart valve. But FHIR was designed to support the day-to-day operations of healthcare providers exchanging electronic health records (EHRs), and in this context, the orientation has historically been different. When using FHIR/RDF with other ontologies, impedance differences are likely to show up in two main ways:
For both of these reasons, to maintain monotonicity in RDF, FHIR/RDF should not be directly interpreted as stating facts; transformations are required to remove or isolate non-monotonic elements and reconcile the records across time and perspective.
Application developers should also be aware that some FHIR data attributes have a major impact on the interpretation of the enclosing data element: the meaning of the enclosing element cannot be determined in isolation. For example, a status of 'entered-in-error' means that the resource was created accidentally and should be ignored for most purposes.
A FHIR resource is represented by a series of RDF triples. The Turtle representation for a resource is described using this format:
Turtle Template [ a fhir:Observation; fhir:nodeRole fhir:treeRoot; # from Resource: id; meta; implicitRules; and language # from DomainResource: text; contained; extension; and modifierExtension fhir:Obervation.identifier [ Identifier ]; # 0..* Unique Id for this particular observation fhir:Obervation.status [ fhir:value "<code>" ]; # R! registered | preliminary | final | amended + fhir:Obervation.code [ CodeableConcept ]; # 1..1 R! Type of observation (code / type) fhir:Obervation.subject [ fhir:reference [ Patient|Group|Device|Location ] ]; # 0..1 Who and/or what this is about fhir:Obervation.encounter [ fhir:reference [ Encounter ] ]; # 0..1 Healthcare event during which this observation is made # effective[x]: 0..1 Clinically relevant time/time-period for observation. One of these 2: fhir:Obervation.effectiveDateTime [ fhir:value "<dateTime>" ]; fhir:Obervation.effectivePeriod [ Period ]; ]
Using this format:
application/fhir+turtle
.
Other
MIME
types:
text/shex
for
the
SHEX
(RDF
schemas)
Each resource is represented as a set of RDF triples represented using the Turtle syntax. When a resource has a persistent identity (e.g. it can be found at a particular URL - usually a FHIR RESTful server), then that URL is its identity. Resources with no persistent identity (e.g. bundles from search results) have the identity of the root document - "<>" in Turtle syntax.
Some
resources
can
contain
other
resources.
Given
that
the
relationships
can
appear
in
any
order,
it
cannot
be
assumed
that
the
first
encountered
element
represents
the
resource
of
interest
that
is
being
represented
by
the
set
of
Turtle
statements.
The
focal
resource
-
where
to
start
when
parsing
-
is
the
resource
with
the
relationship
fhir:nodeRole
to
fhir:treeRoot
.
If
there
is
more
than
one
node
labeled
as
a
'treeRoot'
in
a
set
of
Turtle
statements,
it
cannot
be
determined
how
to
parse
them
as
a
single
resource.
Elements that can repeat are represented with a relationship
fhir:index [n]
where [n] is a zero-based integer offset (i.e. the first element has an index of 0). Lists are never sparse; it is an error if there are missing items in the repeat sequence.
Note: this means that the rdf:list structure is not used.
Primitive elements - elements with a primitive type - are represented as regular nodes so that the elements extensions can be represented. The actual value of the primitive type is represented using the fhir:value predicate:
fhir:value "[value]"^^xs:type
The value has two parts: a literal string that contains the value, and, if applicable, one of the following schema types:
The choice is made based on the types as specified for the primitive type . Note that the correct schema type for a date/dateTime must be determined by inspecting the value of the date for precision.
The fhir:value property can never be empty. Either the relationship is absent, or it is present with at least one character of content. XHTML is represented as an escaped xs:string.
A Reference element is represented using the same rules as above:
fhir:Observation.subjectReference [
fhir:Reference.reference [ fhir:value "Patient/example" ];
fhir:Reference.display [ fhir:value "Example Patient" ];
];
This allows faithful round tripping of the resource between the Turtle format and the JSON and XML formats. However, it's very useful for an RDF processor if the RDF graph links to the target of the reference directly. This can be represented using the fhir:link property:
fhir:Observation.subjectReference [
fhir:link <http://hl7.org/fhir/Patient/example>;
fhir:Reference.reference [ fhir:value "Patient/example" ]
];
The correct value for the fhir:link relationship must be determined by resolving the rules for resolving references for the various reference types to a literal URL that refers to the correct content in the local RDF context.
The fhir:link relationship can be added automatically as part of generating the resource representation, or it can be injected by a post-processor that knows how to convert the raw references into RDF-suitable references.
Inline resources - when a resource is contained directly in another element occur in the following places:
Inline resources are represented directly as anonymous nodes. This is an example for a contained Medication resource:
fhir:DomainResource.contained [
a fhir:Medication;
fhir:index 0;
# triples for the Medication
]
Note that DomainResource.contained has a cardinality of 0..*, so fhir:index is used to order the array.
The same logic applies to the Coding data type. These are represented directly in Turtle by serializing their properties as specified above:
fhir:Observation.code [
fhir:CodeableConcept.coding [
fhir:index 0;
fhir:Coding.system [ fhir:value "http://loinc.org" ];
fhir:Coding.code [ fhir:value "29463-7" ];
fhir:Coding.display [ fhir:value "Body Weight" ]
];
fhir:CodeableConcept.coding [
fhir:index 1;
fhir:Coding.system [ fhir:value "http://snomed.info/sct" ];
fhir:Coding.code [ fhir:value "27113001" ];
fhir:Coding.display [ fhir:value "Body weight" ]
]
];
For reasoners using the RDF graph, it's very useful to make the implicit concept references in these Codings explicit using a rdf:type assertion ("a" in Turtle):
fhir:Observation.code [
fhir:CodeableConcept.coding [
fhir:index 0;
a loinc:29463-7;
fhir:Coding.system [ fhir:value "http://loinc.org" ];
fhir:Coding.code [ fhir:value "29463-7" ];
fhir:Coding.display [ fhir:value "Body Weight" ]
];
fhir:CodeableConcept.coding [
fhir:index 2;
a sct:27113001;
fhir:Coding.system [ fhir:value "http://snomed.info/sct" ];
fhir:Coding.code [ fhir:value "27113001" ];
fhir:Coding.display [ fhir:value "Body weight" ]
]
];
These rdf:type assertions can be made by any agent that knows how to convert from the code system to the correct ontological representation on the RDF context. Note that a few code systems have standard ontological representations, but many don't. Again, these assertions can be made by the serializer, or injected by a post-processor.
FHIR uses ShEx for representing the Turtle schema. See fhir.shex for definitions.
In addition to the basic representation of FHIR resources in Turtle format, a Turtle representation of the FHIR infrastructure and definitions is also published, for the following purposes:
The RDF definitions are published as a series of Turtle files: HL7 v3 RIM (Reference Information Model) and FHIR .
TODO
Application developers wishing to use FHIR/RDF will often need to perform the following rough steps, though exact steps will depend on your application:
(Same
code
as
used
in
the
build)
(based
on
Delphi
reference
implementation
)
,
a
.NET
implementation.
(should
work
on
Mono
)
in
case
new
implementations
have
become
available
.)
.
If
so,
you
can
download
the
ShEx
schema
for
FHIR/RDF
Slides
by
Eric
Prud'hommeaux
illustrate
how
inference
can
be
used
on
FHIR/RDF
data
to
perform
a
query
for
FHIR
Observations
of
rheumatoid
arthritis,
using
the
SNOMED-CT
ontology
.
Caveat:
those
slides
show
some
terms
in
the
fhir:
namespace
that
do
not
actually
exist
in
the
fhir:
namespace,
such
as
fhir:Observation-of-Rheumatoid_arthritis-disorder
and
fhir:Coding-of-Rheumatoid_arthritis-disorder.
A
different
namespace
should
have
been
used
in
the
example.