the key interoperability standards e. ...
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1. Some Key Interoperability Standards in Digital Health 1. HL7: Health Level Seven It is one of the oldest and most commonly used messaging standards. Defines the rules for sending data like Admissions, Discharges, Transfers, Lab Results, Billings among others. Most of the legacy HMIS/HIS systems iRead more
1. Some Key Interoperability Standards in Digital Health
1. HL7: Health Level Seven
Why it matters:
That is, it makes sure that basic workflows like registration, laboratory orders, and radiology requests can be shared across systems even though they might be 20 years old.
2. FHIR: Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources
It organizes health data into simple modules called Resources, for example, Patient, Encounter, Observation.
Why it matters today:
FHIR is also very extensible, meaning a country or state can adapt it without breaking global compatibility.
3. DICOM stands for Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine
Why it matters:
Ensures that images from Philips, GE, Siemens, or any PACS viewer remain accessible across platforms.
4. LOINC – Logical Observation Identifiers Names and Codes
Standardizes laboratory tests.
This prevents mismatched lab data when aggregating or analyzing results.
5. SNOMED CT
Why it matters:
Instead of each doctor writing different terms, for example (“BP high”, “HTN”, “hypertension”), SNOMED CT assigns one code — making analytics, AI, and dashboards possible.
6. ICD-10/ICD-11
7. National Frameworks: Example – ABDM in India
ABDM enforces:
Why it matters:
It becomes the bridge between state systems, private hospitals, labs, and insurance systems without forcing everyone to replace their software.
2. Why Health Systems Are Often Siloed
Real-world health IT systems are fragmented because:
The result?
Even with the intention to serve the same patient population, data sit isolated like islands.
3. How Health Systems Can Overcome Siloed Systems & Enable Real-Time Data Exchange
This requires a combination of technology, governance, standards, culture, and incentives.
A. Adopt FHIR-Based APIs as a Common Language
Think of FHIR as the “Google Translate” for all health systems.
B. Creating Master Patient Identity: For example, ABHA ID
C. Use a Federated Architecture Instead of One Big Central Database
Modern systems do not pool all data in one place.
They:
This increases scalability and ensures privacy.
D. Require Vocabulary Standards
To get clean analytics:
This ensures uniformity, even when the systems are developed by different vendors.
E. Enable vendor-neutral platforms and open APIs
Health systems must shift from:
This increases competition, innovation, and accountability.
F. Modernize Legacy Systems Gradually
Not everything needs replacement.
Practical approach:
Bring systems to ABDM Level-3 compliance (Indian context)
G. Organizational Interoperability Framework Implementation
Interoperability is not only technical it is cultural.
Hospitals and state health departments should:
Establish KPIs: for example, % of digital prescriptions shared, % of facilities integrated
H. Use Consent Management & Strong Security
Real-time exchange works only when trust exists.
Key elements:
A good example of this model is ABDM’s consent manager.
4. What Real-Time Data Exchange Enables
Once the silos are removed, the effect is huge:
Fraud detection Policy level insights For Governments Data-driven health policies Better surveillance State–central alignment Care continuity across programmes
5. In One Line
Interoperability is not a technology project; it’s the foundation for safe, efficient, and patient-centric healthcare. FHIR provides the language, national frameworks provide the rules, and the cultural/organizational changes enable real-world adoption.
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