Essential Guide to – FHIR (Fast Healthcare Interoperability Framework from HL7 )
Within modern healthcare technology, data interoperability has become a prominent topic across the field. As technology has continually improved, so has the ability to record healthcare data digitally. Electronic health records (EHRs) must be accessible across platforms for specified parties, while protecting data integrity. Seamless data exchange improvements are sought after in the field by healthcare providers, stake holders and developers. Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) is the solution developed by the Health Level 7 standards organization (HL7 ). Today, we will dive into an increasingly important push towards FHIR framework and what all you need to know on its rise within the healthcare technology.
What is FHIR?
FHIR stands for Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources and is a HL7 standard for simplified electronic healthcare information exchange across the industry. The adoption of a FHIR framework is the next step to improve upon data interoperability. FHIR provides representation and the ability to share information, such as EHRs, across hospitals, organizations or between healthcare providers in a standardized way despite the differences in the way an EHR is housed and stored.1 HL7 ’s goal is to leverage pre-existing “logical and theoretical models to provide a consistent, easy to implement, and rigorous mechanism for exchanging data between healthcare applications.” 2
What are the basic building blocks?
FHIR is built upon exchangeable information called a “Resource.” It utilizes HTTP-based REST application programming interfaces (APIs) to access, manage and use these specified Resources.3 Resources are comprised of specific data elements, a common set of metadata and a human readable part. For example, a FHIR Resource can represent categories such as patients, specified treatments, laboratory results, imaging, etc. and will be defined by common use data elements that result in exchangeable patient records. Resources take this data information and use the components necessary to connect it to other relevant information related to other Resources. Simplicity, adaptability, and efficiency are what FHIR is accomplishing for the field by making Resources easily understood and implemented for further exchange.
What is philosophy?
The philosophy of FHIR is to build a foundation of Resources, individually or combined, that are adequate for most common use cases, as defined by HL7 . The Resources are used to characterize core information that will be shared amongst the majority of implementations. As for the remaining content, a built-in extension mechanism can be to combine Resources in and Implementation Guide that addresses the specific use case, which leads to expansion of the capabilities set out by FHIR .2
How is it secure?
Protecting health data, such as sensitive patient information, is one of the biggest concerns found within healthcare information technology. It is imperative that stakeholders know that data exchange will be secure. FHIR uses modern security standards, such as authentication, encryption, and labelling sensitive information for authorized users, to protect its data.4
How has it evolved?
HL7 FHIR was initially presented in May 2012, and has since evolved into what it is today through 4 different releases. What started as a true draft standard that included 49 Resources, has now reached 145 Resources, and counting. In 2013, the first release comprised of an emphasis on two use cases – creation of a Personal Health Record on mobile devices and the retrieval of documents to a mobile device – which stimulated the chatter, interest, and thoughts on how this could change the field of healthcare information technology. In 2015 for the second release, additionally non-clinical Resources were implemented, the structure of Resources were adjusted for ease of extensions and the FHIR Maturity Model (FMM) was created that established a 0 – 5 draft to final status set of levels for the Resources to achieve. In the third release in 2017, improvements were made to Resources (Clinical, Administrative, Financial, Clinical Decision Support and Clinical Quality Measure) and a new framework was established to enhance workflow. Currently, we are in release 4 that occurred in 2019. This release included 9 new Resources, Patient and Observation Resources named as normative content, RESTful API, XML and JSON formats, and removed the Trial Use name. Additionally, FHIR release 4 was published as the requirement standard for Health IT Certification in the Final Rule for the 21st Century Cures Act. From 49 to 145 Resources, the standard has continually upgraded to meet the needs of the community and will continue to do so.5
Where are we currently?
In 2023, HL7 published FHIR Release 5 which offered improvements in interoperability and data management abilities. There were numerous advancements that were made, but here are some of the tops to be explored. To create a more complete FHIR based healthcare data exchange across the field, they focused on the development of more supportive conditions and standardized framework for easier access to the data. Patient data is easier accessed and managed for a focus on care and minimizes the room for error within the data. Users now have the opportunity to use topic-based subscriptions, which enables FHIR notifications when there is a change to data in the system. Medication definition Resources were revised to better align with drug catalogs. Resources can now be managed in large sectors to be more efficient in data exchange, such as Groups and Lists. The number of Resources is now published to be 157. To find a comprehensive list of all that can be found in release 5 and what to know about FHIR , click the link here. FHIR looks to maintain its work and prominence in health IT and continue to integrate itself as the standard.
With healthcare data increasing in complexity, technology advancing and expectations rising amongst users, FHIR will continuously adapt and progress in its capabilities. FHIR is the future of healthcare technology and will continue to promote data interoperability by the use of its central operating system.
About Astrix
Astrix is the unrivaled market-leader in creating & delivering innovative strategies, solutions, and people to the life science community. Through world class people, process, and technology, Astrix works with clients to fundamentally improve business & scientific outcomes and the quality of life everywhere. Founded by scientists to solve the unique challenges of the life science community, Astrix offers a growing array of strategic, technical, and staffing services designed to deliver value to clients across their organizations.
References
- eCQI Resource Center. FHIR – Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources | eCQI Resource Center. ecqi.healthit.gov. Published January 31, 2024. https://ecqi.healthit.gov/fhir#:~:text=Fast%20Healthcare%20Interoperability%20Resources%20(FHIR).
- HL7 FHIR. FHIR Specification (v5.0.0: R5 – STU). www.hl7.org. Published March 26, 2023. https://www.hl7.org/fhir/overview.html.
- Ayaz M, Pasha MF, Alzahrani MY, Budiarto R, Stiawan D. The Fast Health Interoperability Resources (FHIR) Standard: Systematic Literature Review of Implementations, Applications, Challenges and Opportunities [published correction appears in JMIR Med Inform. 2021 Aug 17;9(8):e32869]. JMIR Med Inform. 2021;9(7):e21929. Published 2021 Jul 30. doi:10.2196/21929.
- The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology.What Is HL7 FHIR ? https://www.healthit.gov/sites/default/files/page/2021-04/What%20Is%20FHIR%20Fact%20Sheet.pdf.
- The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology.FHIR Version History and Maturity. https://www.healthit.gov/sites/default/files/page/2021-04/FHIR%20Version%20History%20Fact%20Sheet.pdf.
Case Study: LabWare Centralized Data Review for a Global Biopharmaceutical Company
Overview A global biopharmaceutical company specializing in discovery, development,... LEARN MOREWhite Paper: Managing Data Integrity in FDA-Regulated labs.
New White Paper LEARN MORELET´S GET STARTED
Contact us today and let’s begin working on a solution for your most complex strategy, technology and staffing challenges.
CONTACT US