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  • © 2016

Principles of Health Interoperability

SNOMED CT, HL7 and FHIR

  • Updated Third Edition containing sections on SNOMED CT, HL7 and FHIR
  • Authored by two of the most experienced teachers of SNOMED CT, HL7 and FHIR
  • Accessible to both relative novices and more experienced practitioners
  • Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

Part of the book series: Health Information Technology Standards (HITS)

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Table of contents (22 chapters)

  1. Front Matter

    Pages i-xxix
  2. Principles of Health Interoperability

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 1-1
    2. The Health Information Revolution

      • Tim Benson, Grahame Grieve
      Pages 3-17
    3. Why Interoperability Is Hard

      • Tim Benson, Grahame Grieve
      Pages 19-35
    4. Models

      • Tim Benson, Grahame Grieve
      Pages 37-54
    5. UML, BPMN, XML and JSON

      • Tim Benson, Grahame Grieve
      Pages 55-81
    6. Information Governance

      • Tim Benson, Grahame Grieve
      Pages 83-102
    7. Standards Development Organizations

      • Tim Benson, Grahame Grieve
      Pages 103-118
  3. Terminologies and SNOMED CT

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 119-119
    2. Clinical Terminology

      • Tim Benson, Grahame Grieve
      Pages 121-133
    3. Coding and Classification Schemes

      • Tim Benson, Grahame Grieve
      Pages 135-154
    4. SNOMED CT

      • Tim Benson, Grahame Grieve
      Pages 155-172
    5. SNOMED CT Concept Model

      • Tim Benson, Grahame Grieve
      Pages 173-187
    6. Implementing Terminologies

      • Tim Benson, Grahame Grieve
      Pages 189-219
  4. HL7 and Interchange Formats

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 221-221
    2. HL7 Version 2

      • Tim Benson, Grahame Grieve
      Pages 223-242
    3. The HL7 v3 RIM

      • Tim Benson, Grahame Grieve
      Pages 243-264
    4. Constrained Information Models

      • Tim Benson, Grahame Grieve
      Pages 265-281
    5. CDA – Clinical Document Architecture

      • Tim Benson, Grahame Grieve
      Pages 283-301
    6. HL7 Dynamic Model

      • Tim Benson, Grahame Grieve
      Pages 303-309

About this book

This book provides an introduction to health interoperability and the main standards used. Health interoperability delivers health information where and when it is needed.  Everybody stands to gain from safer more soundly based decisions and less duplication, delays, waste and errors.  

The third edition of Principles of Health Interoperability includes a new part on FHIR (Fast Health Interoperability Resources), the most important new health interoperability standard for a generation. FHIR combines the best features of HL7’s v2, v3 and CDA while leveraging the latest web standards and a tight focus on implementability. FHIR can be implemented at a fraction of the price of existing alternatives and is well suited for use in mobile phone apps, cloud communications and EHRs.

The book is organised into four parts. The first part covers the principles of health interoperability, why it matters, why it is hard and why models are an important part of the solution.  The second part covers clinical terminology and SNOMED CT. The third part covers the main HL7 standards: v2, v3, CDA and IHE XDS.  The new fourth part covers FHIR and has been contributed by Grahame Grieve, the original FHIR chief.

Authors and Affiliations

  • R-Outcomes Ltd, Newbury, UK

    Tim Benson

  • Health Intersections Pty Ltd, Melbourne, Australia

    Grahame Grieve

About the authors

Tim Benson graduated from the University of Nottingham as a mechanical engineer. He was introduced to healthcare computing at the Charing Cross Hospital, London, where he evaluated the socio-economic benefits of medical computing systems. He founded one of the first GP computer suppliers (Abies Informatics Ltd). There, with James Read and David Markwell, he helped develop the Read Codes, which became the national standard for NHS primary care and one of the two sources of SNOMED CT.  Tim led the first European project team on open standards for health interoperability, which led to CEN/TC251 and collaboration with HL7, where he was a co-chair of the Education Committee for several years.  He has also developed a family of short generic patient-reported outcome measures with R-Outcomes Ltd (http://www.r-outcomes.com).

 

Grahame Grieve graduated from the University of Auckland as a biochemist, and worked as a clinical diagnostic scientist at St Vincent’s Hospital, Melbourne, before spending four years performing medical research in Diabetes, Lipid Metabolism, and Oxidation. He then switched focus, and joined Kestral Computing P/L, a Laboratory and Imaging Information Systems vendor, where he ended up as Chief Technology Officer, before leaving to establish his own consulting business, Health Intersections Ltd (http://www.healthintersections.com.au). A growing involvement in integration, and interoperability, lead him to the HL7 community where he has led committees and edited standards for HL7 v2, v3 and CDA. The outcome of this was the recognition that something new was needed, and this led to the creation of the FHIR specification, which now consumes his life.

Bibliographic Information

  • Book Title: Principles of Health Interoperability

  • Book Subtitle: SNOMED CT, HL7 and FHIR

  • Authors: Tim Benson, Grahame Grieve

  • Series Title: Health Information Technology Standards

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-30370-3

  • Publisher: Springer Cham

  • eBook Packages: Medicine, Medicine (R0)

  • Copyright Information: Springer-Verlag London 2016

  • eBook ISBN: 978-3-319-30370-3Published: 22 June 2016

  • Series ISSN: 2199-2517

  • Series E-ISSN: 2199-2525

  • Edition Number: 3

  • Number of Pages: XXIX, 451

  • Number of Illustrations: 86 b/w illustrations, 21 illustrations in colour

  • Topics: Health Informatics, Public Health

Buy it now

Buying options

eBook USD 69.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as EPUB and PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Other ways to access