Appl Clin Inform 2017; 08(03): 810-825
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2017-01-RA-0011
Research Article
Schattauer GmbH

Special Topic Interoperability and EHR: Combining openEHR, SNOMED, IHE, and Continua as approaches to interoperability on national eHealth

Mate Beštek
1   National Institute of Public Health, Ljubljana, Slovenia
2   IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark
,
Dalibor Stanimirović
1   National Institute of Public Health, Ljubljana, Slovenia
› Institutsangaben
Weitere Informationen

Publikationsverlauf

received: 18. Januar 2017

accepted in revised form: 15. Mai 2017

Publikationsdatum:
20. Dezember 2017 (online)

Summary

Objectives: The main aims of the paper comprise the characterization and examination of the potential approaches regarding interoperability. This includes openEHR, SNOMED, IHE, and Continua as combined interoperability approaches, possibilities for their incorporation into the eHealth environment, and identification of the main success factors in the field, which are necessary for achieving required interoperability, and consequently, for the successful implementation of eHealth projects in general.

Methods: The paper represents an in-depth analysis regarding the potential application of openEHR, SNOMED, IHE and Continua approaches in the development and implementation process of eHealth in Slovenia. The research method used is both exploratory and deductive in nature. The methodological framework is grounded on information retrieval with a special focus on research and charting of existing experience in the field, and sources, both electronic and written, which include interoperability concepts and related implementation issues.

Results: The paper will try to answer the following inquiries that are complementing each other:

1. Scrutiny of the potential approaches, which could alleviate the pertinent interoperability issues in the Slovenian eHealth context.

2. Analyzing the possibilities (requirements) for their inclusion in the construction process for individual eHealth solutions.

3. Identification and charting the main success factors in the interoperability field that critically influence development and implementation of eHealth projects in an efficient manner.

Conclusions: Provided insights and identified success factors could serve as a constituent of the strategic starting points for continuous integration of interoperability principles into the healthcare domain. Moreover, the general implementation of the identified success factors could facilitate better penetration of ICT into the healthcare environment and enable the eHealth-based transformation of the health system especially in the countries which are still in an early phase of eHealth planning and development and are often confronted with differing interests, requirements, and contending strategies.

Citation: Beštek M, Stanimirovic D. Special Topic Interoperability and EHR: Combining openEHR, SNOMED, IHE, and Continua as approaches to interoperability on national eHealth. Appl Clin Inform 2017; 8: 810–825 https://doi.org/10.4338/ACI-2017-01-RA-0011

Protection of Human and Animal Subjects

The authors declare that human and/or animal subjects were not included in the project.