Your report should be 3-5 pages in length and provide some kind of table or figu
Your report should be 3-5 pages in length and provide some kind of table or figure that could be understood by the client’s informatics leadership. You may want to structure your report as a MEMO or add a cover page to make it professional. Be sure to spell check and provide references to information backing up your claims about support (or lack of support) by an available semantic standard. The hospital seeks to capture data on the following: Administrative Gender (aka sex assigned at birth) Gender Identity Race Ethnicity At the end of the meeting, the hospital asked you to provide guidance on its strategy for capturing, managing, and exchanging these data with its partners. More specifically, they want to use FHIR-based APIs to make these data available to the statewide HIE, which public health is requiring the hospital to use for reporting population health data. To do this, you will first need to identify FHIR-based standards that will enable the hospital to encode the data consistently. Once consistently represented, the information can be queried and exchanged using FHIR resources. First, you will need to conduct research to find the current, up-to-date versions of FHIR standards that can help the hospital encode the data on its wish list. Are there FHIR code systems that support encoding these data? Once you have done your research, you need to then think about the overall HIE strategy for the client so they can not only capture and manage structured data but also exchange them with their partners, especially public health. Prepare a report in which you outline your findings from the research and offer guidance to the client. Your report should specifically address the following questions: Which data elements can be encoded by available FHIR standards? Specify the current version of the standards. Describe the FHIR code systems – their version (include the URL) – and the elements they contain. Are these elements sufficient? Will these elements fully support the goals sought by the hospital? Why or why not? Are the current versions of the FHIR code systems supported by the hospital’s vendor (Epic)? What strategy should the hospital employ to make these data available via FHIR to public health? What role, if any, would a terminology service play in the strategy? How will these data be useful to the hospital in addressing health equity in the community?
Leave a Reply