IE (Ireland) Core Implementation Guide
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The search expectations and IE Core Profiles have been developed and tested using logical FHIR ids. Therefore, a reference to a IE Core resource SHOULD include a logical id (Reference.reference
), not an identifier (Reference.identifier
).
FHIR resource elements of the Reference datatype reference other FHIR resources. For all references, IE Core Responders SHOULD return resources that conform to a IE Core profile if a IE Core profile exists for the resource type. In some cases, IE Core profiles explicitly constrain these references to point to the relevant IE Core profile because the element is typically a Must Support or Additional IECDI Requirements element. For example, CareTeam.subject
in IE Core CareTeam Profile references the IE Core Patient Profile. In other cases, referencing elements point to the base FHIR resource because they are not a Must Support or Additional IECDI Requirements element and, therefore, are unconstrained by IE Core. (This is an editorial decision to simplify and improve the readability of the Profile rendering in this guide.) For example, although IE Core does not constrain Condition.asserter
, its reference to Patient or Practitioner SHOULD be a valid IE Core Patient Profile or IE Core Practitioner Profile.
When responding to a query, servers SHOULD not use inline contained resources to represent the returned data. A contained resource can only be used when the source data exists within the context of the FHIR transaction. For example, the guidance in the Medication List page describes how a contained Medication in MedicationRequest is used to represent the medication. In addition, if referencing a contained resource in a IE Core Profile, the contained resource SHOULD be a IE Core Profile if a IE Core Profile exists for the resource type. Further guidance about the general use case for contained can be found in the base FHIR specification.
In situations where the specific piece of data is hidden for security or privacy reasons, using a code from the DataAbsentReason Code System such as masked
may exceed the data receiver's access rights to know. However, masking data SHOULD be handled based on implemented policies. For elements with a minimum cardinality = 0 (including elements labeled Must Support), the element SHOULD be omitted from the resource. For Mandatory elements (in other words, where the minimum cardinality is > 0), use the code "unknown" following the guidance on Missing Data in the Conformance Sections.
SNOMED CT (Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine – Clinical Terms) is a comprehensive clinical terminology widely used in healthcare to support the electronic exchange of clinical health information. IE Core uses the IE Edition of SNOMED CT, a standalone release that combines the content of the IE Extension and the International releases of SNOMED CT. It is used extensively in IE CORE for various clinical concepts, including problems, procedures, allergies, and laboratory results. When using SNOMED codes in IE Core Profiles, implementers MAY use the default system URI, which refers to an unspecified edition/version, as shown in option one below. However, for terminology servers to be able to validate IE Edition-only codes, implementers SHOULD provide the accompanying system URI to describe the edition as shown in option two.
Using only the system http://snomed.info/sct
refers to an unspecified edition/version. For example:
"code": {
"coding": [
{
"system": "http://snomed.info/sct,
"code": "763875007",
"display": "Product containing sulfonamide (product)"
}
],
"text": "sulfonamide antibacterial"
},
Using the system plus the unspecified version IE Edition URI http://snomed.info/sct/731000124108
. For example:
"code": {
"coding": [
{
"system": "http://snomed.info/sct",
"version": "http://snomed.info/sct/731000124108",
"code": "763875007",
"display": "Product containing sulfonamide (product)"
}
],
"text": "sulfonamide antibacterial"
},
For more details, see Using SNOMED CT with FHIR.
Some IE Core Profiles bind the Quantity.code
element in the Quantity datatype to the UCUM code system. For example, in the IE Core Laboratory Result Observation Profile, Observation.valueQuantity
, Observation.referenceRange.low
, and Observation.referenceRange.high
are bound to UCUM. Systems should also use UCUM for the optional valueRange
and valueRatio
datatypes (which are complex datatypes with Quantity elements). A FHIR UCUM Codes ValueSet that defines all UCUM codes is in the FHIR specification. This guidance specifies how to represent the Quantity datatype when the correct UCUM units are missing or when the units are missing, which will likely occur in the real world.
UCUM code provided
"valueQuantity": {
"value": 26.0,
"unit": "g/mL",
"system": "http://unitsofmeasure.org",
"code": "g/mL"
}
free text units only:
unit
element. "valueQuantity": {
"value": 26.0,
"unit": "RR",
}
no units
"valueQuantity": {
"value": 26.0
}
A FHIR Server SHOULD not delete records. A FHIR server SHOULD update the appropriate resource status to entered-in-error
or inactive
(refer to the next section). If a system supports the deletion of records, they SHOULD refer to the Deletion Safety Checks in the FHIR specification.
Clinical information entered in error in the patient's record needs to be represented by the FHIR Server so that Clients can expose the corrected information to their end users.
Server Recommendations:
entered-in-error
or inactive
.entered-in-error
:
The IE Core CarePlan Profile requires a narrative summary of the patient assessment and plan of treatment. However, any IE Core Profile can include a human-readable narrative containing a summary of the resource and may be used to represent the resource's content to a human. For further guidance, refer to the Narrative documentation in the FHIR Specification.
There is a basic need to access records in your language, and the data provider SHOULD do their best to translate (safely) to the requested language. Understand that this will be variably complete depending on the nature of the record. For example, translating the following elements is relatively straightforward:
Coding.display
Attachment.title
The following guidelines outline requesting and returning a resource in the requested language.
Accept-Language
header.language
element with a code based on the underlying language of record, not the requested language.
Using the Human Language Extension when the language of a display, etc, is known to differ from the stated (or inferred) language.
Example
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<Patient xmlns="http://hl7.org/fhir">
<id value="language-example-1"/>
<meta>
[...snip...]
</meta>
<language value=" es"/>
<!--0..1 Language of the resource content, in this case, Spanish-->
<text>
[...snip...]
</text>
[...snip...]
Using the Translation Extension when the server provides additional translations by its own choice or in response to a different Accept-Language
than what the resource is stored in.
Example
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<Patient xmlns="http://hl7.org/fhir">
<id value="language-example-2"/>
<meta>
[...snip...]
</meta>
<language value=" en"/>
<!--0..1 Language of the resource content: English-->
<text>
[...snip...]
</text>
[...snip...]
Servers SHOULD make it known what languages are supported in their CapabilityStatement(s) using this extension1:
http://hl7.org/fhir/5.0/StructureDefinition/extension-CapablilityStatement.acceptLanguage
For further guidance on language and locale for the generation of the resource narrative, see Multi-Language support in FHIR (Localization/Internationalization) in the core specification.
Fetching resource interactions are defined by the FHIR RESTful API. Guidance is included on the IE core Profile pages for conformance and informative purposes:
GET [base]/[Resource-type]/[id] {parameters}
For more information, see the FHIR RESTful API
Searching resources is defined by the FHIR RESTful API and included here for informative purposes. The IE Core FHIR RESTful Search API Section documents the server and client rules for the RESTful interactions described in this guide.
All the search interactions in this guide use the GET
command with the following syntax:
GET [base]/[Resource-type]?[parameter1]{:m1|m2|...}={c1|c2|...}[value1{,value2,...}]{&[parameter2]{:m1|m2|...}={c1|c2|...}[value1{,value2,...}]&...}
token
type searchparameter (how to search by token), the syntax {system|}[code]
means that the system value is optional for the client to supply.:reference
type SearchParameter (how to search by reference), the syntax {Type/}[id]
means that the Type value is optional for the client to supply:date
type SearchParameter (how to search by date), the syntax data={gt|lt|ge|le}[date]
means the date comparators "gt", "lt", "ge", and "le" are optional. Date type searches without a comparator prefix are equivalent to searches with the "eq" comparator even if a server does not support the comparator.{:m1 | m2 | …}: The list of supported search parameter modifiers |
{c1 | c2 | …}: The list of supported search parameter comparators |
{¶meter2={:m1 | m2 | …}={c1 | c2 | …}[value1{,value2,…}&…}: Optional multiple 'AND' search parameters |
In the simplest case, a search is executed by performing a GET operation in the RESTful framework:
GET [base]/[Resource-type]?name=value&...
For this RESTful search, the parameters are a series of name=[value] pairs encoded in the URL. The search parameter names are defined for each resource. For example, the Observation resource has the name "code" for searching on the LOINC code. For more information, see the FHIR RESTful Search API.
Note that when the patient is implicit in the context of some implementations (e.g., using SMART), the patient parameter can be omitted:
GET [base]/[Resource-type]{?other-parameters}
Currently, most EHRs permit queries that provide a single patient resource id but do not support the comma-separated query or a query where the patient parameter is omitted, as described in the standard FHIR REST API. Instead, a user-facing app can perform multiple "parallel" queries on a list of patient ids. Alternatively, the FHIR Bulk Data Access (Flat FHIR) specification can be used to perform a "back end" system-level query to access large volumes of information on a group of individuals. It can also be used to identify and query against an unknown population, such as when looking for population-based research data or population-level queries for public health surveillance.
However, neither specification defines how a user-facing provider app can seek real-time "operational" data on multiple patients (such as all patients with recent lab results). Opportunities to add this capability to this guide are discussed in Future of IE Core.
Servers SHOULD support the _lastUpdated
search parameter for IE Core Profiles and SHOULD populate Meta.lastUpdated
for IE Core Profiles as accurately as possible. Servers SHALL document in CapabilityStatement.rest.resource.searchParam.documentation
the types of changes that can be detected using the _lastUpdated
search parameter (see example snippet below).
Example CapabilityStatement snippet for a server supporting the _lastUpdated
search parameter for IE Core Laboratory Result Observation Profile
{
"resourceType": "CapabilityStatement",
...
"rest": {
{
"mode": "server",
...
"resource": [
{
"type": "Observation",
"supportedProfile": [
"http://iehr.ai/fhir/ie/core/StructureDefinition/ie-core-observation-lab",
...
],
...
"searchParam": [
{
"name": "_lastUpdated",
"definition": "http://hl7.org/fhir/SearchParameter/Resource-lastUpdated",
"type": "date",
"documentation": "This parameter is supported for Observations with the category
\"laboratory\" and allows searching for Observations that have been created or the
status updated since the specified date."
},
...
]
}
]
}
}
Many servers are unable to accurately populate the Meta.lastUpdated
element.
Note to Clients:
Meta.lastUpdated
may not reflect a change in the resource and resource updates may not result in updates to Meta.lastUpdated
._lastUpdated
search results may not reflect changes clients can access and all updates to a resource may not be returned using the _lastUpdated
search. (in other words, false negatives and false positives _lastUpdated
search results are possible).Meta.lastUpdated
may reflect changes a client can not access. (for example, the client may not be authorized to see the changed data).Meta.lastUpdated
in a resource does not imply support for searches using the _lastUpdated
search parameter._lastUpdated
search parameter does not require servers to support Meta.lastUpdated
; servers can use an alternative method to track changes to an instance.Note to Servers:
Work is in progress to enable FHIR Topic-Based Subscription for notifications on relevant events as an alternative to search polling.
IE Core servers are not required to support patient compartment based searches.
IE Core servers are not required to resolve absolute URLs external to their environment.
Servers can choose to return the results in a series of pages to manage the number of search results returned. The search result set contains the URLs used to request additional pages from the search set. For a simple RESTful search, the page links are included in the returned bundle as links. See the managing returned resources in the FHIR specification for more information.
Footnotes:
This extension is converted from a new element in a future version of CapabilityStatement. ↩