This
page
is
part
of
the
FHIR
Specification
(v4.0.1:
R4
(v5.0.0:
R5
-
Mixed
Normative
and
STU
)
).
This
is
the
current
published
version
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
R3
R2
FHIR
Infrastructure
Work
Group
|
Maturity Level : N/A | Standards Status : Informative |
FHIR®
–
Fast
Healthcare
Interoperability
Resources
(hl7.org/fhir)
–
is
a
next
generation
standards
framework
created
by
HL7.
FHIR
combines
the
best
features
of
HL7's
v2
,
HL7
v3
and
CDA
product
lines
while
leveraging
the
latest
web
standards
and
applying
a
tight
focus
on
implementability.
FHIR
solutions
are
built
from
a
set
of
modular
components
called
"Resources".
These
resources
can
easily
be
assembled
into
working
systems
that
solve
real
world
real-world
clinical
and
administrative
problems
at
a
fraction
of
the
price
of
existing
alternatives.
FHIR
is
suitable
for
use
in
a
wide
variety
of
contexts
–
mobile
phone
apps,
cloud
communications,
EHR-based
data
sharing,
server
communication
in
large
institutional
healthcare
providers,
and
much
more.
FHIR offers many improvements over existing standards:
A central challenge for healthcare standards is how to handle the wide 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 the existing resources and describing their use with Profiles. All systems can read all resources, but applications can add more control and meaning using profiles. Many healthcare contexts require extensive local agreements.
In addition, each resource carries a human-readable text representation using html as a fall-back display option for clinical safety. This is particularly important for complex clinical information where many systems take a simple textual/document based approach.
This simple 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.
FHIR is published as a mixed standard with Normative portions, which are kept stable for implementers, and also parts still undergoing Trial Use. HL7 actively monitors implementations in order to continue to improve the specification to be responsive to their needs. Due to the many advantages FHIR offers, FHIR is widely used around the world, and the implementation community is growing quickly.
http://hl7.org/fhir
.
Follow
us
on
Twitter
using
#FHIR