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Opening the Duke electronic health record to apps: Implementing SMART on FHIR.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Bloomfield, RA; Polo-Wood, F; Mandel, JC; Mandl, KD
Published in: Int J Med Inform
March 2017

OBJECTIVE: Recognizing a need for our EHR to be highly interoperable, our team at Duke Health enabled our Epic-based electronic health record to be compatible with the Boston Children's project called Substitutable Medical Apps and Reusable Technologies (SMART), which employed Health Level Seven International's (HL7) Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR), commonly known as SMART on FHIR. METHODS: We created a custom SMART on FHIR-compatible server infrastructure written in Node.js that served two primary functions. First, it handled API management activities such rate-limiting, authorization, auditing, logging, and analytics. Second, it retrieved the EHR data and made it available in a FHIR-compatible format. Finally, we made required changes to the EHR user interface to allow us to integrate several compatible apps into the provider- and patient-facing EHR workflows. RESULTS: After integrating SMART on FHIR into our Epic-based EHR, we demonstrated several types of apps running on the infrastructure. This included both provider- and patient-facing apps as well as apps that are closed source, open source and internally-developed. We integrated the apps into the testing environment of our desktop EHR as well as our patient portal. We also demonstrated the integration of a native iOS app. CONCLUSION: In this paper, we demonstrate the successful implementation of the SMART and FHIR technologies on our Epic-based EHR and subsequent integration of several compatible provider- and patient-facing apps.

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Published In

Int J Med Inform

DOI

EISSN

1872-8243

Publication Date

March 2017

Volume

99

Start / End Page

1 / 10

Location

Ireland

Related Subject Headings

  • Systems Integration
  • Software
  • Mobile Applications
  • Medical Informatics
  • Humans
  • Health Level Seven
  • Health Information Exchange
  • Electronic Health Records
  • Boston
  • 46 Information and computing sciences
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Bloomfield, R. A., Polo-Wood, F., Mandel, J. C., & Mandl, K. D. (2017). Opening the Duke electronic health record to apps: Implementing SMART on FHIR. Int J Med Inform, 99, 1–10. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2016.12.005
Bloomfield, Richard A., Felipe Polo-Wood, Joshua C. Mandel, and Kenneth D. Mandl. “Opening the Duke electronic health record to apps: Implementing SMART on FHIR.Int J Med Inform 99 (March 2017): 1–10. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2016.12.005.
Bloomfield RA, Polo-Wood F, Mandel JC, Mandl KD. Opening the Duke electronic health record to apps: Implementing SMART on FHIR. Int J Med Inform. 2017 Mar;99:1–10.
Bloomfield, Richard A., et al. “Opening the Duke electronic health record to apps: Implementing SMART on FHIR.Int J Med Inform, vol. 99, Mar. 2017, pp. 1–10. Pubmed, doi:10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2016.12.005.
Bloomfield RA, Polo-Wood F, Mandel JC, Mandl KD. Opening the Duke electronic health record to apps: Implementing SMART on FHIR. Int J Med Inform. 2017 Mar;99:1–10.
Journal cover image

Published In

Int J Med Inform

DOI

EISSN

1872-8243

Publication Date

March 2017

Volume

99

Start / End Page

1 / 10

Location

Ireland

Related Subject Headings

  • Systems Integration
  • Software
  • Mobile Applications
  • Medical Informatics
  • Humans
  • Health Level Seven
  • Health Information Exchange
  • Electronic Health Records
  • Boston
  • 46 Information and computing sciences