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12:00 AM - 29th ECCMID
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29th ECCMID
2019-04-13 - 2019-04-16    
All Day
Welcome to ECCMID 2019! We invite you to the 29th European Congress of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases, which will take place in Amsterdam, Netherlands, [...]
4th International Conference on  General Practice & Primary Care
2019-04-15 - 2019-04-16    
All Day
The 4th International Conference on General Practice & Primary Care going to be held at April 15-16, 2019 Berlin, Germany. Designation Statement The theme of [...]
Digital Health Conference 2019
2019-04-24 - 2019-04-25    
12:00 am
An Innovative Bridging for Modern Healthcare About Hosting Organization: conference series llc ltd |Conference Series llc ltd Houston USA| April 24-25,2019 Conference series llc ltd, [...]
International Conference on  Digital Health
2019-04-24 - 2019-04-25    
All Day
Details of Digital Health 2019 conference in USA : Conference Name                              [...]
16th Annual World Health Care Congress -WHCC19
2019-04-28 - 2019-05-01    
All Day
16th Annual World Health Care Congress will be organized during April 28 - May 1, 2019 at Washington, DC Who Attends Hospitals, Health Systems, & [...]
Events on 2019-04-13
29th ECCMID
13 Apr 19
Amsterdam
Events on 2019-04-24
Events on 2019-04-28
Latest News

Regenstrief taps FHIR to make EHR more complete and accessible

In pilot testing a new way to compile healthcare information electronically, researchers at the Regenstrief Center for Biomedical Informatics are using HL7’s FHIR.

FHIR, or Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources, merges data from individual electronic health records with those stored in the Indiana Network for Patient Care, the framework for the state’s health information exchange.

Titus Schleyer, a Regenstrief Institute investigator, and Clem McDonald, professor of biomedical informatics at Indiana University School of Medicine, are leading the project.

“What we are working on is a first and could have a huge impact on patients whose health information is distributed across multiple electronic systems – probably the vast majority of the people in the United States,” Schleyer said in a statement announcing the work that is underway.

He said employing FHIR makes it possible to combine information about a specific patient stored in systems developed by different vendors – Epic and Cerner, for example – and installed at different healthcare institutions. It means clinicians would have complete information about their patients.

[Also: What will EHRs look like in 2020?]

“For example, imagine that you as a patient can use an ‘app’ on your smart phone to reconcile the multiple lists of medications maintained by several care providers into one authoritative, current list. And then, you can bring that list to your colonoscopy screening appointment for review by your physician prior to the procedure. That is huge, which is why the federal government is also focusing attention on helping patients do that,” said Schleyer.

“FHIR helps us create a secure, complete, accessible, and useful set of health information needed by clinicians and patients.”

John Halamka, MD, chief information officer of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, chairman of the New England Healthcare Exchange Network and professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, is bullish on the possibilities of Regenstriefs’s FHIR project.

“FHIR enables an ecosystem of innovative apps, much like the iPhone and Android platforms did,” he said in a statement. “The difference is that FHIR is truly cross-platform. It doesn’t care what EHR or system is underneath it.”

Regenstrief is known for having developed and advanced one of the nation’s first electronic medical record systems, one of the country’s first computerized provider order entry systems, and a health information exchange which has made Indiana the most health-wired state in the country.

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