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EHR SD RM Milestones 2008 2009 2010 2011 Healthcare SOA Reference Architecture (H-SOA-RA) EHR SD RM Immunization & Response Management (IRM) Prototype.

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Presentation on theme: "EHR SD RM Milestones 2008 2009 2010 2011 Healthcare SOA Reference Architecture (H-SOA-RA) EHR SD RM Immunization & Response Management (IRM) Prototype."— Presentation transcript:

0 EHR SD RM SAIF Alpha Project “EHR System-Design Reference-Model”
Constructing a Future State EHR Reference Architecture EHR Way Ahead Business Architecture From HL7, HITSP and ARRA Artifacts For presentation at HL7 Cambridge, MA Meeting, 5 October 2010 Slides and White Paper Available at: EHR SD RM info: Also See Practical Guide for SOA in Healthcare Vol II: Immunization Management Case Study at GovProjects; SOA Suggestions for Improvement Requested

1 EHR SD RM Milestones 2008 2009 2010 2011 Healthcare SOA Reference Architecture (H-SOA-RA) EHR SD RM Immunization & Response Management (IRM) Prototype HSSP Practical Guide for SOA in Healthcare Volume II: Immunization Case Study Oct EHR SD RM Informative White Paper TBD EHR-S CI-IM & HF&EA May EHR SD RM Informative Reference Sep EHR SD RM DSTU TBD EHR SD RM Normative Standard DSTU is Draft Standard for Trial Use (ANSI standards development) EHR-S CI-IM is EHR System Computationally Independent Information Model HF&EA is Harmonization Framework and Exchange Architecture

2 2008 initiated H-SOA-RA Healthcare SOA Reference Architecture
This Reference Architecture is built on the HL7 EHR System Functional Model (EHR-S FM), HITSP Interoperability specifications/Capabilities and OMG SOA layers. The objective of the H-SOA-RA is to assure semantic interoperability at the Service Level and consistency within and among systems’ architectural specifications, resulting in aligned, interoperable and agile enterprise architectures and their system components. EHR SD RM info:

3 HL7 EHR System Functional Model (EHR-S) > 160 System Functions in 4 level categorization (separate spreadsheet available for full enumeration) EHR-S FM functions can be grouped into Service Components … aka Capabilities (e.g., Lab Order Capability, which does eligibility and authorization function as well as lab order function). System Functions Other O Electronic Resource Planning (ERP) O Finances O Other NOTE: “Other” Category - The EHR-S model does NOT include Electronic Resource Planning (ERP) / Logistics and Financial components, which are needed for completeness of a Health IT Enterprise. 3

4 Healthcare SOA Framework Based on HL7 EHR System Functional Model & Thomas Erl’s SOA Layers
HL7 System Functions  Direct Care Supportive Information Infrastructure Other Business Process Value Chains Composite Services Federated Composition (e.g., Choreograph or Orchestration) Within and Across Business Areas Core Business Functional Areas + Focal Classes Entity Information Management Reporting and Management Agnostic Services C r o s s T e c h n I c a l “Common S e r v I c e s” (e.g., Security, Privacy, Auditing, Logging…) Application Ambulatory Care Systems, In Patient Care Systems Logistics Systems Financial Systems Decision Support Systems Data Marts Repositories Business Objects Implementation Profiles Integrated Healthcare Enterprise (IHE) Profiles Analysis Profiles Communications Profiles/Stacks Implementation Profiles Re: Focal Classes:  The issue is less the idea of a focal class than a business focal class. The difference is that when you model the service, you are generally modeling a service that will express the state changes of a business. For example, via analysis, you would find the states of a business focal class (canceled, new, active, signed, finalized in lab orders for example) and the trigger events that would correspond to state changes ("a lab is ordered", "a lab is canceled", "a lab specimen is corrupted", and so on).  You could say that a "patient" is a focal class, but a patient ID service generally doesn't express operations to modify the state of that "object". Rather, a patientID service would generally encompass operations that would express information about the class (reconcileID or lookUpID, eg) rather than tying the service functional components to changes in the state of that class.  It is not a subtle distinction - most clinical domains are focused on a focal class (an order, an encounter, an appointment, a schedule, a lab). A business service is focused with exposing that class to the enterprise.  Infrastructure services (or the subset information services) are generally function calls or based on exposing sets of information. The functional profiles of the service are generally not focused on the state of the underlying information or in the trigger events that modify the state of that information. They tend to be focused along different lines - typically along the lines of an information profile (a RIM-based patient class, eg, or a CDA-based CCD). The focal class is explicit in a business service, generally implicit in other services. 4 4

5 ANATOMY OF AN ANCILLARY SYSTEM
LABORATORY RADIOLOGY PHARMACY CARDIOLOGY OT/PT/SPEECH IDENTITY TERMINOLOGY AUTHORIZATION SCHEDULING CORE BUSINESS SERVICES SUPPLY CHAIN (ORDER/CHARGE) DOCUMENT RECORDS MANAGEMENT s DECISION SUPPORT PERFORMANCE DATA MANAGEMENT 5

6 HL7 EHR_S-Based Functional Architecture/Services Analysis
ETC Infrastructure Functions Manage Business Rules Interoperability Infrastructure Services Security Policy Records Management Audit Terminology Registry Workflow Business Rules etc Terminology Unique ID, Registry, and Director Primary Care Critical/Emergency Care Dental Non-Surgical Specialty Care Laboratory Nursing Pharmacy Population Health Behavioral Health ETC. Information and Records Management Security Lines of Business Record Management Manage Patient History Preferences, Directives, Consents, and Authorizations Core Clinical Services Entity Identification Resource Location and Updating Services Decision Support Orders Management Scheduling Image Management Etc. Summary Lists Management of Assessment Cross-Cutting Direct Care/ Support Functions Care Plans, Treatment Plans, Guidelines, and Protocols Orders and Referral Management Documentation of Care, Measurement, and Results Record Patient Specific Instructions Clinical Decision Support Clinical Workflow Tasking Support Clinical Communication Support Knowledge Access ETC 6

7 2009 initiated EHR-SD RM EHR System Design Reference Model
This project matures and integrates the April 2008 Healthcare Services Oriented Reference Architecture (H-SOA-RA) into an EHR System Design Reference Model (EHR-SD RM), using the HL7 SOA-Aware Enterprise Architecture Framework (SAIF), HITSP interoperability specifications, EHR System Functional Model (EHR-S FM) and ARRA artifacts. Emphasis is placed on maintaining HITSP, ARRA, NHIN and CCHIT conformance by maintaining EHR-S FM traceability. Mapping and analysis of the HL7 product portfolio against the EHR-S FM is used to integrate the reference architecture with HL7 product lines and initially mature the resulting model as a technical white papers, then an informative reference model and finally a standard reference model. EHR SD RM info:

8 EHR-SD RM Project Description and Plan
PROJECT DESCRIPTION: HL7 EHR System Design Reference Model (EHR SD RM) This project will mature the April 2008 Healthcare Services Oriented Reference Architecture (H-SOA-RA) version 1.0 into H-SOA-RA Version 2.0, for HL7 Architecture Review Board (ArB) consideration, and then integrate it into an EHR System Design Reference Model (EHR-SD RM), using the HL7 SOA-Aware Enterprise Architecture Framework (SAIF), HITSP Multi-Enterprise Architecture of Networked Services Standards (MEANS), EHR System Functional Model (EHR-S FM). Emphasis will be placed on maintaining AHIC, HITSP, NHIN and CCHIT conformance by maintaining Information Exchange Requirements (IERs) and Data Requirements (DRs) traceability. Mapping and analysis of the HL7 product portfolio against the EHR-S FM will be used to integrate the reference architecture with HL7 product lines and initially mature the resulting model as a technical white papers, then an informative reference model and finally a standard reference model. An HSSP based prototype case study architectural specification will be built to validate the effort. Phases: For Project Information, see EHR SD RM Framework Populate the framework with HL7 EHR-S Functional Model content, candidate healthcare Information Exchanges, HITSP capabilities/ services and data architecture Information Model Loosely-coupled top-down Framework Rigorously specified bottom up structure/ content based on HITSP Data Architecture Socialize EHR SD RM (HL7 Meeting, Jan 2010) Collaborate with others within HL7 (ongoing) Publish HL7 HSSP Practical Guide for SOA in Healthcare Part 2: Case Study (May 2010) Solicit public comment; collaborate with IHE; HL7/OMG SOA Conference (May to Sept) HL7 Informative ballot (Oct 2010) HL7 Normative ballot (Oct 2011) 1 - Populate a framework of candidate healthcare services, with IERs, based on SAIF service categories Define priority Information Exchange Requirements (IERs) Define priority Data Requirements (DRs) along with IERs Map IERs and DRs to the framework of candidate healthcare services Build Catalog of candidate Services from 2008 H-SOA-RA work Show AHIC-HITSP traceability (e.g., AHIC IERs to HITSP ISs to standards) Show NHIN traceability (align with NHIN services) Show CCHIT traceability (align with CCHIT test criteria) Compare and contrast framework of candidate healthcare services with Canada Infoway’s SOA and/or other SOA 2 - Define EHR-SD RM Map Priority IERs and DRs to EHR-S FM Map candidate services to EHR-S FM Define EHR-SD RM based Business Transformation Architecture methodology for Identify gaps and overlaps in HL7’s portfolio Identify artifacts that do not now exist but are indicated in the EHR-S FM Identify the extent of duplication that may exist across HL7 artifacts 3 - Create prototype EHR-SD RM validation case study prototype, using AHIC-HITSP Public Health and Emergency Response use cases and Interoperability Specifications Services Aware Enterprise Architecture Framework (SAIF) HITSP Multi-Enterprise Architecture of Networked Services Standards (MEANS) and HL7 HSSP Practical Guide for SOA in Healthcare “sample health” example specifications Include mapping to MHS and DOD specific IERs and DRs Publish HL7 HSSP Practical Guide for SOA in Healthcare Part 2: Case Study To show HITSP, NHIN and CCHIT conformance criteria, use OMG Object Constraint Language and/or OWL Semantic Ontology specification language

9 HITSP Harmonization Framework
IS Capability Service Collaboration Transaction, Transaction Package Components IS = Interoperability Specification Addressing Business Needs Available for Independent Implementation Providing Infrastructure, Security, Privacy Defining Information Content Data Architecture Base and Composite Standards

10 HITSP Constructs A HITSP Interoperability Specification (IS) defines a business context, supports a business workflow, constrains and orchestrates underlying constructs. A HITSP Capability (CAP) is a specification that assembles HITSP constructs to fulfill a business need for information exchanges. To use a Capability, an Interoperability Specification or an implementation conformance statement must assign Systems to one or more Capability System Roles and identify how the Capability Options are to be addressed. The use of a Capability shall: for each assigned Capability System Role, the responsibilities of the assigned System Role must be supported, including all interfaces specified by the underlying HITSP constructs according to the conditions specified for the assigned System Role. If a Capability option is selected, the implementation must conform to the Capability’s specifications for that option. A HITSP Service Collaboration (SC) binds communications infrastructure, security and privacy constructs together. A HITSP Transaction Package (TP), Transaction (T), Component (C) is where standards-based Interface Design Specifications are specified and conformance requirements are defined.

11 Constructing a Future State EHR Reference Architecture
OBJECTIVE: A system agnostic Future State EHR Business Architecture (BA) specified with a lexicon, based upon HITSP’s data architecture, HL7’s System Functional Model (EHR-S FM) and HL7’s Reference Information Model (RIM). A Health IT EHR BA can be modeled as clinical stakeholder requirements and their workflow-orchestration of HL7 RIM compliant HITSP data modules manipulated by HL7 EHR-S FM functions. NIEM Information Exchange Package Documents An EHR Information Model, for a project or enterprise, can be constructed from the HITSP data models managed by the EHR Functions used within the EHR BA, categorized using the HL7 RIM Entity, Role and Action foundation classes. These concepts are the topic of this presentation

12 EHR System Design Reference Model (EHR SD RM)
Supporting Requirements/ Architecture Development Cycle PROCESS INPUTS -Required Capabilities -Environments -Constraints EHR System Design Reference Model Capabilities, Functions, Information and Information Exchanges Stakeholder Requirements Definition Functions – Dependencies Conformance Criteria Conformance is a recognition of formal testing, that prove that a system provides 100% support for a given standard. Requirements Loop Interface Specifications Requirements Analysis Specifications Loop Test Specifications Architectural Specifications Verification & Validation Loop Test Loop PROCESS OUTPUTS -System Architecture, -Test Specifications -Configuration Management Baselines 12 12

13 EHR SD RM Supporting Requirements/ Architecture Development Cycle
Stakeholder Requirements What is the system supposed to do? Under what conditions will the products be used? Where will the products of the system be used? How often? How long? Who will use the products of the system? Requirements Analysis (“HOW?” using “Action Verbs”) Analyze functions and Services Decompose higher level functions to lower level functions Allocate performance requirements to the functions Architecture Design (Which hardware/ software elements) Define the physical architecture Each part must perform at least one function Some parts may perform more than one function Test Specifications How Requirements-Specifications are validated Requirements Loop Ensure all requirements are covered by at least one function Ensure all functions are justified by a valid requirement (no unnecessary duplication) Design Loop Ensure all functions are covered by at least one hardware or software element Ensure all elements of physical architecture are justified by a valid functional requirement (no unnecessary duplication) Verification & Validation (V&V) Loop Each requirement must be verifiable that the solution meets requirements and validated that it meets the user’s needs and expectations. V&V can be accomplished by: Inspection, Analysis, Demonstration, Test Test Loop Ensure all information is covered by test specifications Ensure all interfaces are covered by test specifications 13

14 Value Proposition of Standards Based Approach
Analysis Pre-Done: Analysts from throughout industry have vetted and contributed to the development of thorough specifications Less Customization: COTS vendors are already building applications to meet these specifications. Comprehensive View: Standards provide a way to ensure that requirements and design address all of the necessary issues Lack of unexpected dependencies late in project: All functions and specifications have been pre-analyzed and defined Better Interoperability: Standards based approaches will ensure development between all stakeholders are able to communicate at the project and technical level Across Project Visibility: Normalized requirements and design would allow for “apples to apples” comparison across the portfolio

15 Basic UML Legend

16 Requirements Analysis Interface Design Analysis
EHR System Design Reference Model (EHR SD RM) Constructing a Future State EHR Reference Architecture Functional Analysis Object Analysis Requirements Analysis Interface Design Analysis Service Analysis 16

17 2010 SAIF Alpha Project The Practical Guide For SOA in Healthcare Volume II Immunization Management Case Study The Practical Guide for SOA in Healthcare Volume II presents a case study, which adds an Immunization Management Capability (IMC) to Volume I’s SampleHealth’s Service Oriented Architecture (SOA). We used the TOGAF Architecture Development Method (ADM) and HL7 Service Aware Interoperability Framework (SAIF) Enterprise Conformance and Compliance Framework (ECCF). Volume II demonstrates the use of HL7’s EHR System Design Reference Model (EHR-SD RM) linked artifacts (e.g., EHR System Functional Model, FHIM, HITSP, HITEC, HSSP, IHE, NIEM, etc) to provide an initial architectural baseline suitable for an EHR related SOA acquisition, development or certification project. We conclude with lessons learned. Healthcare Services Specification Project (HSSP) Practical Guide:

18 Immunization Management ECCF Specification Stack
Subject Specification Enterprise Viewpoint “Why” Policy Information “What” Content Computational “How” Behavior Engineering “Where” Implementation CIM (Conceptual) Inventory of Use Cases Capabilities-Services Requirements Contracts Stakeholders Business Scope Business Vision Business Objectives Policy & Regulations Domain Entities Roles, Activities, Associations. Information Models Conceptual Domain Inventories of Capabilities-Components, Functions-Services. Accountability, Roles Behaviors, Interactions Functional Profiles, Interfaces, Contracts Conceptual Functional Service Specifications Inventory of Platforms/ Environments. PIM (Logical) Applicable Rules Use Case Specs Governance. Technology Neutral Standards Wireframes of architectural layers Components and Associations Localized Constrained Project Message Content Specifications Component. specs Interface Specs Interaction Specs Collaboration Participations Collaboration Types Function Types Interface Types Collaboration Scripts Service Contracts Existing Platform models, Capabilities, Libraries and Versions. PSM (Implementable) Business Nodes Business Rules Business Procedures Business Workflow Technology Specific Standards Database Schemas Message Schemas Transformation Schemas (e.g., XSD) Automation Unit Technical Interfaces Technical Operations Orchestration Scripts Application Specs. GUI Specifications Component Designs Deployment Topology Platform Bindings 18

19

20 HL7 Development Framework (HDF)
SAIF ECCF - Services Aware Interoperability Architecture - Enterprise Compliance and Conformance Framework Implement & Test Initiation EHR-S FM & EHR-S CI-IM EHR System Function Model & EHR System Computationally-Independent Information-Model V&V Checkpoint V&V Checkpoint Peer Review “Ballot” Analysis V&V Checkpoint HL7 Development Framework (HDF) DSTU - Draft Standard for Trial Use “Prototype” Draft Working Document; Not for Public Distribution Specifications for Business Objects Components Capabilities Applications Systems Design DAM Domain Analysis Models CDA Clinical Document Architecture CMET Common Model Element Types D-MIM Domain Message Information Model Interoperability Specifications for Messages and/or Documents and/or Services V&V Checkpoint V&V is Verification and Validation 20

21 SAIF ECCF Viewpoints ECCF PSM CIM PIM 21
CIM is Computationally Independent Model PIM is Platform Independent Model PSM is Platform Specific Model Draft Working Document; Not for Public Distribution PIM 21

22 SAIF Alpha-Project Conclusions
Effective SOA programs involve cooperation and coordination among a wide variety of business, technical and functional participants from across an organization, including senior management sponsorship, business community ownership, program management, governance, architecture, project level execution, test and certification and sustainment teams. The HL7 EHR-SD-RM helps bring these communities together throughout a Business Capability Lifecycle. It maps capabilities and business Information Exchange Requirements (IERs) to the HL7 EHR System Functional Model (EHR-S FM), to Healthcare Information Technology Standards Panel (HITSP) Data Architecture, Security and Privacy Architecture, Harmonization Framework, Interoperability Specifications, Constructs and their referenced standards; Federal Health Information Model (FHIM); National Information Exchange Model (NIEM) Information Exchange Package Documents (IEPDs); Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise (IHE) profiles; Certification Commission for Health Information Technology (CCHIT) criteria and 2009 Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act selected standards for interoperability and meaningful use objectives and criteria.

23 EHR-S CI-IM EHR System Computationally-Independent Information-Model (Started Jun2010)
This project will produce a set of Constrained Information Models called EHR-S “data profiles”. Each EHR-S data profile corresponds directly with an EHR-S function profile and each EHR-S data profile will include one-or-more Reference Information Model classes. Pairs of EHR-S function profiles and data profiles can be used to define business objects, which can be composed into software components, capabilities, applications, systems and their message exchanges and/or document exchanges and/or services. The superset of EHR-S data profiles is called the EHR-S Computationally-Independent Information-Model, which supports the HL7 Development Process and Service Aware Interoperability Framework. The project will include the development and execution of a communication strategy to ensure that all affected stakeholders are engaged.

24 HL7 RIM (Reference Information Model) Six Core Classes Defining a Semantic Framework which Maintains Clinical Data Context ENTITY ROLE ACT (aka ACTION) Participation Role link Act relationship ACT – something that has happened or may happen Entity – a person, animal, organization, or thing Role – a responsibility of, or part played by, an Entity Participation – the involvement of a Role in an Act Act Relationship – a relationship between two Acts Role Link – a relationship between two Roles. The HL7 RIM expresses the data content needed in a specific clinical or administrative context and provides an explicit representation of the semantic and lexical connections that exist between the information carried in the fields of HL7 messages. Language / communication The HL7 RIM supports EHR interoperability; an EHR may needs additional foundation classes (e.g., Responsibility)

25 Federal Health Information Model (FHIM) Person Model (Harmonized with RIM, HIPAA & HITSP)

26 HL7 EHR System Computationally-Independent Information-Model
(EHR-S CI-IM) Project Draft Working Document; Not for Public Distribution EHR-S CI-IM RIM Classes Entity a.b.c EHR-S Data Modules EHR-S FM Entity d.e.f 1:1 Relationship between Function Profiles and Data Profiles For each EHR-S Function, its Data Profile = Set of RIM Classes and their EHR-S Data Modules 1:N Relationship among Data Profiles and RIM Classes Role a.b.c EHR-S Data Modules DC x.y.z EHR-S Function Profile Role d.e.f Act a.b.c EHR-S Data Modules Act d.e.f SC x.y.z EHR-S Function Profile Act Relationship a.b.c EHR-S Data Modules Act Relationship d.e.f IN x.y.z EHR-S Function Profile Role Link d.e.f Role Link a.b.c EHR-S Data Modules Participation d.e.f DC is Direct Care SC is Supportive Care IN is Infrastructure Participation a.b.c EHR-S Data Modules

27 Harmonization Framework and Exchange Architecture (HF&EA) Started Jun 2010
The first objective of this HL7 Harmonization Framework and Exchange Architecture (HF&EA) project is to define a notional set of architectural artifacts for HL7 projects and EHR System (EHR-S) development or acquisition projects. The second objective is to define the relationships among HL7 architectural artifacts and how they relate to other healthcare related standards and architectural artifacts, which can support a Model Driven Architecture (MDA) waterfall, spiral, agile or other development methodology. The third objective is to be an implementation guide for the use of the HL7 Development Framework (HDF) process and HL7 Service Aware Interoperability Framework Enterprise Compliance and Conformance Framework (SAIF ECCF) structure by which architectural work products are reused or developed, are organized into an Interoperability Specification and used throughout an architecture development project, the governance that should be enacted on these work products, and the scope of the standardization effort itself. The fourth objective is to define a Healthcare Information Exchange Model (H-IEM) for model-driven Healthcare Information Exchange Package Documentation (H-IEPD) and exchange architecture. The fifth objective is to demonstrate how the HDF and ECCF can complement other frameworks such as TOGAF, Agile Scrum, DODAF and Zachman.

28 Example of SAIF Traceability
Using HL7 EHR-S FM Business Viewpoints Conceptual Independent Model Platform Independent Model Platform Specific Model Information Viewpoints Conceptual Independent Model Platform Independent Model Platform Specific Model NCIDs NCIDs Engineering/Technical Viewpoints Conceptual Independent Model Platform Independent Model Platform Specific Model Behavioral Viewpoints Conceptual Independent Model Platform Independent Model Platform Specific Model NCIDs HL7 SDO EHR-S FM NCIDs Key to Traceability Traceability is achieved by using Numeric Concept Identifiers (NCIDs) from the HL7 EHR System Functional Model (EHR-S FM) as attributes to all SAIF artifacts. This is analogous to a library system, which uses Dewey decimal numbers as book identifiers.

29 Notional EHR SD RM Logical View
29

30 Supporting EHR System Functional Model R2
EHR SD RM Status (Oct 2010) Supporting EHR System Functional Model R2 EHR SD RM foundation (linked XML version) Spring 2011 ballot HITSP (2010 completion) ARRA Meaningful Use Objectives/ Criteria (Jun 2010 Final Rule) Sub Projects EHR Computationally Independent Information Model Harmonization Framework and Exchange Architecture SAIF Implementation Guide

31 SAIF ECCF integration/ Pre-population Use
EHR SD RM Issue 2011 Representation? Linked XML (most flexible for documentation, current preference) EHR–S FM (R2) and it’s profiles (2011) HL7 Domain Analysis Models (DAMS) and Detailed Clinical Models (DCMs) HITSP (2010) Interoperability Specifications and constructs ARRA MU Meaningful Use Objectives & Criteria (2010) EHR CI-IM, FHIM and NIEM (TBD) Local Profile Investment Portfolio (Capabilities vs. funding line items and year) Systems (Configuration Managed Capabilities) Responsible Organizations (Program/Project Management Offices) Innovation Projects Modeling Tool (graphically based … best for presentations) Enterprise Architect Eclipse IBM/ Rational Eclipse Papyrus Other Representation (HL7 MIF) SAIF ECCF integration/ Pre-population Use Project Specific Web-based Ad-Hoc Report Generator

32 The National Way Forward (Oct 2010) ONC Standards and Interoperability Framework
Standards Development (TBD) Pilot Demonstration Projects (Lockheed Martin) Use Case Development and Functional Requirements (Accenture) Harmonization of Core Concepts (Deloitte) Certification and Testing (Stanley/Deloitte) Implementation Specifications (Deloitte) Reference Implementation (Lockheed Martin) Tools and Services (Use Case Development, Harmonization Tools, Vocabulary Browser, Value Set Repository, Testing Scripts, etc) (Stanley) 32

33 Contact Information Nancy Orvis Chief Integration Architect Office of the Chief Information Officer DoD Military Health System Steve Hufnagel Enterprise Architect, TIAG contract support Office of the Chief Information Officer DoD Military Health System HOW TO PARTICIPATE: Coordinate with cell. We have a weekly telecom each Friday Eastern PHONE: , CODE: # WEB LINK: PROJECT WIKI: Backup Slides Follow 33

34 INTEGRATED REQUIREMENTS DESIGNS: Putting the H-SOA-RA Pieces Together
Ancillary Systems INTEGRATED REQUIREMENTS DESIGNS: Putting the H-SOA-RA Pieces Together LABORATORY PT/OT/SPEECH RADIOLOGY PHARMACY SPECIALTY CARE RESPIRATORY CARDIOLOGY DIETARY IDENTITY TERMINOLOGY Inter-Service TEST ONLY AUTHORIZATION INPATIENT SCHEDULING Inter-Agency Federated Business Services SUPPLY CHAIN: (ORDERS/CHARGES) Core Business Services ER DOCUMENT RECORDS MANAGEMENT ASU Federated Services, may be categorized by: -- Encounter Types -- CMS billing category -- Record type -- Care setting type -- etc. DECISION SUPPORT Across Providers PERFORMANCE CLINIC DATA MANAGEMENT OUTPATIENT OTHER ANALYTIC Agnostic Services SUPPORT Data sets are defined for each system functional-capability-service module IT PLATFORM 34

35 EHR SD RM Supporting Requirements, Governance & Architectural Processes
35

36 The HL7 Services-Aware Interoperability Framework (SAIF)
SAIF Contains: Enterprise Conformance and Compliance Framework (ECCF) is based on RM-ODP Behavioral Framework (BF) Interoperability Scenarios supporting the RM-ODP Computational Viewpoint Governance Framework (GF) Governance is the overarching policy structure and set of related processes by which a group exercises its authority and demonstrates accountability for accepted responsibilities within a particular jurisdiction. SAIF Principles: Applicable within each of HL7’s three Interoperability Paradigms (IPs), (i.e., messages, documents, and services). Provide support for measurable conformance and compliance. Define appropriate governance structures and processes. Provide support for directly implementable solutions. Address the growing disparity between the various solution sets emerging from HL7. Utilize existing V3/RIM artifacts and expertise to the maximum degree possible.

37 Abbreviations B-Case is Business Case BPM is Business Process Model
CCD is Continuity of Care Document CCHIT is Certification Commission for Health Information Technology CDRL is Contract Deliverable DBT is Defense Business Transformation IHE is Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise NHIN is National Health Information Exchange PCC is Patient Care Coordination RM-ODP is Reference Model of Open Distributed Processing SOA is Service Oriented Architecture

38 Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA) www.whitehouse.gov/omb/egov
Performance Reference Model - The FEA PRM is a framework to measure the performance of major IT initiatives and their contribution to program performance. The PRM leverages performance measurement best practices from the public and private sectors, including the Balanced Scorecard, Baldrige Criteria, Value Measurement Methodology, program logic models, the value chain, and the theory of constraints. There is an increased emphasis placed on linkage of investment to agency program performance and the PRM will help agencies produce enhanced performance information. Furthermore, the PRM will assist in: improving the alignment of program goals and objectives with Mission Area goals and objectives; improving communication of program contributions such as technology (input) to outputs and outcomes; and in identifying improvement opportunities that span traditional organizational boundaries. Business Reference Model - The Business Reference Model (BRM) is a functional-driven framework for describing and organizing the day-to-day business operations of the Federal Government into Lines of Business (LOBs), independent of the agencies that perform the business operation. The BRM is the first layer of the Federal Enterprise Architecture and it is the organizing construct for the analysis of the other four reference models: performance, service components, data, and technology. Service Component Reference Model - The Service Component Reference Model (SRM) is a functional framework to evaluate to identify government-wide opportunities to leverage IT investments and assets from a service perspective. This model helps understand the services delivered by the government and assess if there is an opportunity to group like services and create leverage opportunities, such as reuse or shared services. Data Reference Model - The Data Reference Model (DRM) describes at an aggregate level, the data and information required to support the Lines of Business (LOBs). The three elements of data exchange that have been standardized include data description, data context, and data sharing. Establishing a common data model streamlines the information exchange process within and across the Federal Government and facilitates the ability to identify duplicative data resources. Technical Reference Model - The Technical Reference Model (TRM) establishes a common technical framework for categorizing standards, specifications, and technologies that support and enable the delivery of services. This framework can be leveraged to support the development, delivery, and exchange of business and application components (Service Components) that may be leveraged in a Component-based or Service Oriented Architecture (SOA). Furthermore, it also serves as the foundation to advance the re-use of technology and best practices from each of the Service Components on a government-wide basis.

39 HITSP Clinical Document Components
HITSP Reuse Paradigm: With HITSP/Capability Communication of Structured Documents, a HL7 Clinical Data Architecture (CDA) document can be composed, from any group of C83 data modules, and then it can be communicated. Benefit: agile system interoperability.

40 HITSP/C83 Data Module Categories
Module Category Description Personal Information The personal information includes name, address, contact information, personal identification information, ethnic and racial affiliation and marital status of a person Support Support includes the patient's sources of support, such as immediate family, relatives and/or guardians. This includes next of kin, caregivers, support organizations, and key contacts relative to healthcare decisions. Support providers may include providers of healthcare related services, such as a personally controlled health record, or registry of emergency contacts Healthcare Providers This includes a list of the healthcare providers and organizations that provide or have provided care to the patient Insurance Providers and Payers Insurance providers include data about the organizations or individuals who may pay for a patient's healthcare, and the relationships, demographics and identifiers of those individuals with respect to the payer. Such organizations or individuals may be health insurance plans, other payers, guarantors, parties with financial responsibility, some combination of payers or the patient directly Allergies and Drug Sensitivities This includes the allergy or intolerance conditions, severity and associated adverse reactions suffered by the patient Conditions This includes relevant clinical problems and conditions for which the patient is receiving care, including information about onset, severity, and providers treating the condition. Conditions are broader than, but include diagnoses Medications This includes the patient's prescription or non-prescription medications and medication history, and may include prescriptions, fulfillments and medication administration activities Immunizations This includes data describing the patient's immunization history Vital Signs This includes data about the patient’s vital signs Test Results This includes data about current and historical test results from laboratory or other diagnostic testing performed on the patient Encounter This includes data describing the interactions between the patient and clinicians. Interaction includes both in-person and non-in-person encounters such as telephone and Procedures This includes data describing procedures performed on a patient Family History Data defining the patient’s genetic relatives in terms of possible or relevant health risk factors that have a potential impact on the patient’s health Social History Data defining the patient’s occupational, personal (e.g. lifestyle), social, and environmental history that have a potential impact on the patient’s health Medical Equipment Medical Equipment includes implanted and external medical devices and equipment that a patient’s health status depends on, as well as any pertinent equipment or device history Functional Status Data defining the patient’s functional status with respect to, ambulatory ability, mental status or competency, activities of daily living, including bathing, dressing, feeding, grooming, home/living situation having an effect on the health status of the patient, and ability to care for self Plan of Care The plan of care contains data defining prospective or intended orders, interventions, encounters, services, and procedures for the patient

41 Federal Health Information Model (FHIM) Process
Define Strategy Define Modeling Process Define Style Guide/ Tools Gather Participants Establish Workgroups Present UML Models, XML schema Draft Models / Document Concepts & codes Vet Model & Data Dictionary Harmonize Feedback Domain Workgroup Plan Person Workgroup Enrollment Eligibility Coordination of Benefits Workgroup Security & Privacy Workgroup Behavioral Health Pharmacy Workgroup Lab Workgroup tbd

42 PART III Prototype EXAMPLE
Vaccination and Adverse Event Reporting Prototype AHIC Use Cases EHR-S FM HITSP Capabilities Information Model

43 SAIF Alpha-Project Description
The Practical Guide for SOA in Healthcare Volume II presents a case study, which adds an Immunization Management Capability (IMC) to Volume I’s SampleHealth’s Service Oriented Architecture (SOA). We used the TOGAF Architecture Development Method (ADM) and HL7 Service Aware Interoperability Framework (SAIF) Enterprise Conformance and Compliance Framework (ECCF). Volume II demonstrates HL7’s EHR System Design Reference Model (EHR-SD RM) Linking EHR System Functional Model, FHIM, HITSP, HITECH, HSSP, IHE, NIEM To provide an Exchange Architecture baseline suitable for an EHR related SOA acquisition, development or certification project.

44 EHR-SD RM Prototype [2008 AHIC Use Cases] Immunization and Response Management (IRM)
The IRM AHIC Use Case and HITSP Interoperability Specification are intended to support current interoperability approaches between EHRs and Immunization Information Systems while allowing for a migration toward emerging interoperability implementations and document sharing environments where PHRs are able to be included in the information flow The Interoperability Specification also allows for basic electronic information exchanges to enable requirement communications and alerting mechanisms and to lay the foundation for future clinical support capabilities Scenario 1: Vaccine and Drug Administration and Reporting and Scenario 2: Vaccine and Drug Inventory Reporting

45 EXAMPLE ARTIFACT: Vaccine and Drug Administration and Reporting Information Exchanges
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46 EXAMPLE ARTIFACT Vaccine and Drug Administration and Reporting Use Case Full use case available at: 46

47 EHR-SD RM Prototype Information Exchange Requirements (IERs) Vaccine and Drug Administration and Reporting Use Case IER10 Identify patient IER13 Send/receive notification of document availability IER18 Send/receive clinical document IER26 Identify communication recipients IER27 Send non-patient notification message or alert IER40 Query for existing data IER42 Request/receive medical concept knowledge IER54 Query/response for clinical message data IER67 Send/receive clinical message IER78 Send/receive Vaccine Inventory Requirements IER79 Query/response for inventory usage data IER80 Send/receive Vaccine Inventory Data For details, see HITSP IS 10 Immunization and Response Management, available at 47

48 EHR-SD RM Prototype Data Requirements (DRs) Vaccine and Drug Administration and Reporting Use Case
DR08 Unstructured Data DR11 Immunization response data DR12 Adverse Event Report DR13 Drug/Vaccine Inventory Data DR14 Drug/Vaccine Inventory Usage Data DR15 Drug/Vaccine Inventory Availability Data DR16 Supply Chain Management Vaccine Recall DR17 Decision Support Data DR18 Vaccination Data DR19 Medication Administration data DR20 Aggregate Inventory of Available Vaccine DR21 Terminology Data DR22 Generic Alert Data DR23 Consumer Vaccination View For details, see HITSP IS 10 Immunization and Response Management, available at 48

49 EHR-SD RM Prototype HITSP Security and Privacy Vaccine and Drug Administration and Reporting Use Case IER01 Provide authorization and consent IER02 Send data over secured communication channel IER03 Create audit log entry IER04 Synchronize system time IER05 Verify entity identity IER06 Provide proof of document integrity and origin IER55 Anonymize patient identifiable data IER56 Pseudonymize patient identifying information For details, see HITSP IS 10 Immunization and Response Management, available at 49

50 EHR System Functional Model Interoperability Specifications
EXAMPLE ARTIFACT HL7 Requirements and Certification Criteria and HITSP Design HL7 EHR System Functional Model HITSP Interoperability Specifications 50

51 EXAMPLE ARTIFACT EHR-S Requirements
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52 EXAMPLE ARTIFACT EHR-S FM Dependencies
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53 EXAMPLE ARTIFACT HITSP Interoperability Design Specifications
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54 IS10 IRM HITSP Constructs Mapped to Standards
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55 HITSP and Immunization Use Case
# Capability Patient Identification Data Retrieval and Update Decision Support 1 Standards Org HL7 2 Service Specification Identification Service Functional Model Retrieve, Locate, Update SFM Decision Support SFM 3 OMG 4 Identification Service Specification Retrieve, Locate, Update Spec Decision Support Service Spec 5 Profile Org IHE 6 SOA Profile SOA White Paper 7 8 Immunization Profile PIX/PDQ SC110 Query for Existing Data (QED) CAP123 SC113 Immunization Content (IC) CAP119 CAP133 SC112 Request for Clinical Guidance CAP133 (IC payload) 9 American Immunization Registry Association/CDC 10 Draft: 2.5 Impl Guide 11 2.3.1 Impl Guide CAP131 CAP132 SC115 2.3.1 Impl Guide CAP131 CAP132 SCII5 12 13 Original Standard V2 V3 Patient Admin messaging V3 Care Record messaging V3 (POIZ) Immunization messaging V3 Care Record CDA V3 POIZ messaging

56 Immunization Use Case - Simplified
# Capability Patient Identification Data Retrieval and Update Decision Support 1 Standards Org HL7 2 Service Specification Identification Service Functional Model Retrieve, Locate, Update SFM Decision Support SFM 3 OMG 4 Identification Service Specification Retrieve, Locate, Update Spec Decision Support Service Spec 5 Profile Org IHE 6 SOA Profile SOA White Paper 7 IHE/American Immunization Registry Association/CDC 8 Immunization Profile PIX/PDQ SC110 Future Draft: 2.5 Impl Guide Query for Existing Data (QED) CAP123 SC113 Immunization Content (IC) CAP119 CAP133 SC112 Request for Clinical Guidance CAP133 (IC payload) 12 13 Original Standard V2 V3 Patient Admin messaging V3 Care Record messaging V3 Care Record CDA

57 Immunization Use Case Within HL7 SAEAF ECCF Specification Stack
# Patient Identification Data Retrieval and Update Decision Support 1 Enterprise View (Service Functional Models) 2 Identification Service Functional Model Retrieve, Locate, Update SFM Decision Support SFM 3 Computational View (Service Definitions) 4 Identification Service Specification Retrieve, Locate, Update Spec Decision Support Service Spec 5 Information View (Payloads) 6 PIX/PDQ SC110 Future Draft: 2.5 Impl Guide Query for Existing Data (QED) CAP123 SC113 Immunization Content (IC) CAP119 CAP133 SC112 Request for Clinical Guidance CAP133 (IC payload) 7 Implementation View (Vendor Implementations) 8 Base Standard 9 V2 V3 Patient Admin msg V3 Care Record msg V3 Care Record CDA V3 Care Record mesg

58 Service Definition Ref: A Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) View of IHE Profiles IHE 2009

59 Meaningful Use Rules and Regs
# Capability Patient Identification Data Retrieval and Update Decision Support 1 Standards Org HL7 2 Service Specification Identification Service Functional Model Retrieve, Locate, Update SFM Decision Support SFM 3 OMG 4 Identification Service Specification Retrieve, Locate, Update Spec Decision Support Service Spec 5 Profile Org IHE 6 SOA Profile SOA White Paper 7 8 Immunization Profile PIX/PDQ SC110 Query for Existing Data (QED) CAP123 SC113 Immunization Content (IC) CAP119 CAP133 SC112 Request for Clinical Guidance CAP133 (IC payload) 9 American Immunization Registry Association/CDC 10 Draft: 2.5 Impl Guide 11 2.3.1 Impl Guide CAP131 CAP132 SC115 2.3.1 Impl Guide CAP131 CAP132 SCII5 12 13 Original Standard V2 V3 Patient Admin msg V3 Care Record msg V3 (POIZ) Immunization msg V3 Care Record CDA V3 Care Record messaging V3 POIZ messaging

60 Immunization Management Case Study Questions?
HOW TO PARTICIPATE: Coordinate with or cell. We have a weekly telecom each Friday Eastern PHONE: , CODE: # WEB LINK: PROJECT WIKI:


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