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FRAGMENTATION: How to Avoid It 1. Adopt Open Standards: FHIR, SNOMED, ICD, LOINC The basis of any interoperable system is a shared language. When every module speaks a different "dialect," the integration becomes expensive and unreliable. Use open global standards: FHIR: Fast Healthcare InteroperabiRead more
FRAGMENTATION: How to Avoid It
1. Adopt Open Standards: FHIR, SNOMED, ICD, LOINC
Use open global standards:
Example: A lab report from a rural PHC, using FHIR + LOINC, can automatically populate the patient’s record in the state HMIS dashboard or PMJAY claim portal without any manual entry.
2. Design Modular, API-Driven Architecture
Instead of creating monolithic applications, design microservices to expose data through standardized APIs.
Each service, such as Beneficiary Identification, Preauthorization, Claim Submission, and Wallet Management, now becomes:
3. Establish a Federated Data Architecture
Centralized databases may be seductive yet are hazardous in that they build points of failure and reduce autonomy.
Instead, employ a federated model:
Example: A Rajasthan-based hospital keeps the patient data locally, but shares the anonymized claim details to a central PM-JAY database through consented APIs.
4. Creating a Unified Health ID and Registry Layer.
The common cause of fragmentation is inconsistency in identity systems: patient names spelled differently, missing IDs, or duplicate records.
Solutions:
Result: Every patient, provider, and facility can be uniquely identified across systems, enabling longitudinal tracking and analytics.
5. Governance Over Technology
Example: The National Health Authority (NHA) in India mandates ABDM compliance audits to ensure systems aren’t diverging into new silos.
6. Consent and Trust Frameworks
Human Impact: A patient feels in control and not exposed while sharing data across hospitals or schemes.
7. Encourage Vendor Interoperability
Most health systems are stuck with proprietary systems built by vendors.
Governments and large institutions should:
Example: The RFP for Haryana’s Health Data Lake explicitly laid down the requirement of ABDM Level 3 compliance and API openness, which can be emulated by other states.
8. Unified Dashboards, Diverse Sources
Example: Your PM-JAY convergence dashboard housing metrics relating to hospital claims, BIS enrollments, and health scheme coverages is just a perfect example of “one view, many sources.”
9. Invest in Capacity Building
Impact: better adoption, fewer mismatched fields, and reduced duplication.
10. Iterative Implementation, Not One Big Bang
Avoiding fragmentation is not about changing all the systems overnight.
It’s about gradual convergence:
Example: First, implement the integration of BIS → Preauthorization → Claims, and then embark on Wallet, FWA, and Hospital Analytics modules.
The Human Side of Integration
Building that trust means showing real benefits:
That’s where the “why” of integration becomes real, and fragmentation starts to fall away.
Imagine a national “digital health highway”:
The Takeaway
Avoiding fragmentation isn’t just about integration; it’s about coherence, continuity, and compassion. A truly connected health system views every patient as one person across many touchpoints, not many records across many databases. They create a single, trusted heartbeat for an entire healthcare ecosystem.
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