1/16/2016 6:56 PM Healthcare Services Specification Project An Overview of HSSP April 2006 Ken Rubin...
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Transcript of 1/16/2016 6:56 PM Healthcare Services Specification Project An Overview of HSSP April 2006 Ken Rubin...
05/03/23 15:59
Healthcare Services Specification Project An Overview of HSSP
April 2006
Ken RubinEDS
Co-Chair, OMG Healthcare Domain Task Force
Co-Chair, HL7 Services-oriented Architecture [email protected]
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Organization of Today’s Program
• Background / Rationale behind HSSP
• HSSP Objectives
• The Impetus for Collaboration
• OMG, HL7, and Operational Concerns
• Project Artifacts
• Dialog: The Value of Participating
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Project context: Why was HSSP created?
• Several large provider organizations were each facing challenges in integrating current and emerging systems
– Veterans Health Administration
– Kaiser-Permanente
– SerAPI Project (Finland)
• There were a number of shared beliefs among the founding partners…
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Project context: Why was HSSP created? (2)
• In each case…
– There was active integration and development work
– There was a shared belief that messaging alone was not the optimal solution
– A services-oriented architecture was the target environment
– It was recognized that developing “stovepipe” services would not address business challenges
– There was strong commitment to standards
– There was recognition standard services would further interoperability with partners and products
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So, what is HSSP?
• An project to create common “service interface specification” standards that are tractable within healthcare IT
• A joint initiative co-sponsored by Health Level 7 (HL7) and the Object Management Group (OMG)
• Its objectives are:– To create useful, usable healthcare standards that address
functions, semantics and technologies– To complement existing work and leverage existing standards – To focus on practical needs and not perfection– To capitalize on the best industry talent through open
community participation and maximizing each community for its strengths
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HSSP Builds Upon Existing Work
Abi
lity
to In
tero
pera
te
High
Low
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Current HSSP Priority Areas
Area Scope and Rationale for PriorityTerminology Services To develop a comprehensive terminology specification
(versioning, maintenance, query, etc.) built upon the current CTS specification. Selected based upon past precedence, ongoing work interest, and ability to validate the emerging methodology.
Entity Identification To manage and maintain identities within and across domains, localities, or products.
Anticipated to be critical path dependency for other services; foundational work was available from HL7 and OMG.
Record Location and Retrieval
To discover, retrieve, and update records in distributed environments.
Seen as core foundational service to support EHR and healthcare delivery with interest from many national and regional programmes. Location & Retrieval merged upon recognition that location was effective retrieval of metadata.
Decision Support To assess data (such as patient data) and returns specific conclusions as the output. Seen as a way to significantly reduce effort required and to promote wider adoption of CDSS implementations. Selected based upon strong business need and interests and additional volunteer community.
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OMG, HL7, and the CollaborationOMG, HL7, and the Collaboration
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Collaboration Rationale – Initial Thoughts…
• HL7 has a world-class functional community
• …but HL7’s strength is not service architecture
• HSSP project needed to leverage talent of a strong architectural community
• OMG has history and demonstrated leadership in service definition and SOA
• OMG provided the ability to interact with multiple vertical domains (pharma, manufacturing, etc.)
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The Challenges
• Prior negative history between the two organizations
• HL7 and OMG had very different membership composition
• Drastically different processes
• Differing intellectual property models between HL7 and OMG
• Potential for added complexity by involving additional organizational dependency
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Attractions about the Collaboration
• Allowed project to leverage each group to its core strength
• “Whole” better than the sum of the parts: better specs!
• Opportunity to broaden marketplace impact
• Core tenets of OMG process ensure technical viability and marketplace availability (e.g., remove the shelfware stigma)
• Rapid adoption model: 18 months from concept to standard
• Methodology embraces multi-platform standards specifications
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The Result…
• HL7 brings…– Healthcare semantic interoperability expertise and credibility– Rich, extensive international community perspective– Diverse membership base
• OMG brings– distributed systems architecture and modeling excellence– Effective, efficient, rapid process – Premise that standards must be implemented
• Resulting in…– Services will be identified by the community needing them– Improved methodology resultant from functional and architectural
merging of the two groups– Facilitation of multi-platform implementation and broader
implementation community
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The Opportunity Created...
• HSSP is open to any type of participant:
– National, Federal, State, Local Governments
– Payers, Providers, Consultants– Individual stakeholders
• The process facilitates each party participating to their maximum advantage– Discussions are “community of interest” focused
• Healthcare discussions in healthcare venue
• Technical discussions in technical venues• Processes and results are open and available
– All proceedings are published on web and listserv– Consistent multinational/multicultural participation
• “Guiding Principles” ensure we don’t lose sight of our objectives
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Project Operational ConcernsProject Operational Concerns
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The Approach
• HL7 is leading in service selection, functional elaboration, and conformance criteria
• OMG is leading the technical specification
• Both organizations jointly participating in all activities
• Work products are “owned” by only one organization but used collaboratively (e.g., any product is “hosted” by HL7 or OMG)
• “Operate as one project” is a core principle
• Actively seeking vendor participation
• Eclipse has committed to providing open source implementations
• IHE discussions are underway to profile and demonstrate viability of the implemented solutions
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Project Organisation
• One overarching project with five subproject efforts
• Overall project
– Meets at HL7 and OMG meetings
– Status teleconferences biweekly
– Owns responsibility for planning, marketing, etc.
• “Infrastructure” Subgroup
– Developed and maintains methodology
• Subprojects
– Determine their own deadlines, meeting schedules, etc.
– May be hosted by other committees
– Leverage project infrastructure and methodology
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Timeline of Key Events
1996: First OMG Healthcare Service Spec Adopted (PIDS?)
2003: HL7 ServicesBOF formed
2004 September: HL7, OMG Collaboration MOU
2005 January: Joint Project Chartered
2005 April: Project Kickoff
2006 March: Issue Ballot for Functional Specs
2006 Q4: Technical Specs RFP (planned)
2005 September: Methodology and MetaSpecs Baselined (planned)
2005 October: Interoperability Services Workshop & Conference
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2006 HSSP Project Schedule (major milestones)
Jan: Charter HL7 SOA SIG
HL7UK Information Day
Jul: HL7 Educational Summit
Issue 4 ballots (3 + 1)
Feb: Announce intention to ballot Aug: Ballot review
Mar: Issue ballots for RLUS Sep: HL7 Boca Raton (Reconciliation);
RLUS DSTU’s Adopted! OMG Anaheim (Issue RFPs)
Apr: OMG Meeting St. Louis
(RLUS RFP prep)
Oct: Intent to ballot DSS, EIS, CTS2
May: HL7 San Antonio
(RLUS ballot reconciliation)
Nov: Issue DSS, CTS2 Ballots
Jun: Announce intention to ballot
(3 committee, 1 membership)
OMG Boston (Issue Draft RFPs)
Dec: OMG Washington
(Review Initial RFP Submissions)
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HSSP Project Differentiators
• Active participation from three continents and 15+ organizations
• Significant cross-cutting community involvement• Providers (Kaiser, VHA, Intermountain Health, Mayo)• Vendors (CSW Group, IBM, PatientKeeper, Universata)• Value-added Providers (MedicAlert, Ocean Informatics, Eclipse
Foundation, etc.)• Payers (Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Kaiser)• Integrators (IBM, EDS)• Governments (Veterans Health Administration, Canada Health
Infoway, HealthConnect (Australia), SerAPI (Finland))
• Managing differences between SDOs in terms of membership, intellectual property, and cost models
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Where should I engage?
Interest Area (including representative communities-of-interest)
Venue
Setting functional priorities; selecting priority services(Consumers, Providers, Vendors, Integrators)
HL7
Defining behaviour; service capabilities(Consumers, Providers, Vendors)
HL7
Defining functional conformance/compliance criteria(Consumers, Regulatory)
HL7
Technical specification, interface specification, evaluation criteria(Consumers, Regulatory, Integrators)
OMG
Technical conformance/compliance criteria(Consumers, Regulatory, Integrators)
OMG
Architectural considerations; service interdependencies, SOA(Integrators, Vendors, Implementers)
OMG
Product development; technical standard creation; API definition(Vendors, Implementors)
OMG
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References
• HL7 Website:
• http://www.hl7.org
• OMG Website:
• http://www.omg.org
• Services Project Homepage
• http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ServicesSpec
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Thank you!
Ken Rubin, EDS+1 703 845 3277 desk
+1 301 335 0534 [email protected]
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Supplemental SlidesSupplemental Slides
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How the priorities were determined…
• Based on an open selection process
• Brainstorming gave way to successive refinement and downselect
• Priorities determined by business need and resources
• Initial list included Terminology, Entity ID, Record Location, Record Retrieval
• Record Location and Retrieval activities subsequently merged
• Decision Support added later based upon community interest and resources
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SDOs …The Impacts and Rationale of HSSP Specifications
Impacts Rationale
Useable standards Emphasis on practicality
Market-focused standards based on commercial implementations
Shortens time required to develop specifications and encourages collaboration
Promotes harmonization, cooperation, cohesion among standards communities
Integration of function, data, and technology promotes leveraged reuse
More members/involvement = more revenue & better specs
Practical, market-focus and iterative timeline promotes participation and results
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Why “services” and not “messages”?*
• Accepted industry best practice – A common practice in healthcare but not yet healthcare IT– Commonplace usage across “IT” outside of healthcare– Many key products use them but do not expose interfaces
• Services define behavior explicitly and data transport implicitly– Ensures functional consistency across applications– Furthers authoritative sources of data– Minimizes duplication across applications, reuse
• Services do not preclude the use of messages– Services rely upon underlying transport protocols – Messages can be used as payloads for service calls – Messaging infrastructure may be used as underlying transport
*slide adapted from a Veterans Health Administration Presentation, used with permission
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So, what about web services?
• Web services alone (e.g., SOAP/WSDL, etc) do not solve the problem:– What behaviours do we expect of an MPI?– What behaviours are not expected or should remain
unspecified?– What confidence do we have that two MPIs can interoperate
in an SOA intra- or inter-organization?– What about information semantics?– How will business exceptions be managed across
instances?• These issues are not addressed via selection of SOAP/WSDL
as a platform• These issues are not entirely addressed via Web Services as an
ITS
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Overview of Key HSSP Artefacts
• Service Development Framework (SDF)– Methodology describing the services specification process
– Integrates life cycle across HL7 and OMG with callouts to existing processes (such as ballots)
– Version 1.0 Baselined in January 2006 (HL7 Phoenix)• Service Functional Model (SFM)
– Describes in business terms the behaviour of the service
– Identifies relevant information content (e.g., RIM-derived artefacts, terminologies, etc.)
– Technology independent – Includes conformance profiles
• RFPs
• Submissions
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The SFM and Leveraged HL7 Content
• The SFM:– identifies relevant semantics (including HL7 RIM-derived
content, terminologies, constraints, etc)Note: HSSP does not expect to be adding RIM content. When shortcomings exist, the work will be directed to the appropriate existing HL7 Committees.
– includes a section to cite existing external work and explain its relevance
– has a traceability matrix to the EHR Functional Model and Standard
– expressed behaviours are intended to be explicit representations considering HL7 Application Roles, Interactions, etc.
– conformance profiles are one mechanism of addressing localization concerns and implementation variations
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Why Participate in HSSP?
• Relentless focus on added business value for healthcare and project participants– focused on and driven by business-need
– not an “academic exercise” striving for perfection
– Acknowledgement that standards must be used to be useful
– Emphasis on practical, achievable, & marketplace-relevant
• Without these standards, we’re building “service stovepipes”
• Aggressive timelines encourage progress
• Assembled community of top industry talent
• Project structure promotes targeted participation
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Why participate in Standards?
• This is happening—the only way to influence the outcome is to engage
• Prime opportunity to directly engage with complementing stakeholder groups (provider-to-vendor, vendor-to-payer, SDO-to-SDO, etc)
• Benefit from “lessons learned” from others
• Reduce design burden
• Significant networking opportunities
• Establish/maintain market presence as thought-leader