-
Join 1,196 other subscribers
Subscribe
-
Past Posts
- openEHR turns 20 today
- Why using expressions in workflow is wrong
- A Lingua Franca for e-health takes shape with GraphiteHealth
- The Health IT Platform – a definition
- What is interoperability?
- Directions in clinical guideline programming – CHA2DS2-VASc
- Design-by-Contract (DbC) v Test-Driven Design (TDD)
Categories
- Computing (44)
- Culture (3)
- decision support (3)
- FHIR (19)
- Health Informatics (93)
- openehr (67)
- Philosophy (7)
- Politics (2)
- standards (49)
- Uncategorized (2)
- workflow (1)
Recent Comments
- Pablo Pazos on openEHR turns 20 today
- Natalia Iglesias on openEHR turns 20 today
- dr. William Goossen on openEHR turns 20 today
- David Kerr on Design-by-Contract (DbC) v Test-Driven Design (TDD)
- Athanasios Anastasiou on Why using expressions in workflow is wrong
General ICT
Health IT
Technology
Tag Archives: graphite
A Lingua Franca for e-health takes shape with GraphiteHealth
Colleagues in e-health often say to me: why don’t you make openEHR easier to map to <insert popular interop standard> (used to be HL7v3, then HL7 CDA, now, HL7 FHIR… DSTU2/3/4/5?). To which I usually reply: if you are implying … Continue reading
Posted in FHIR, Health Informatics, openehr, standards
Tagged archetype, CEM, graphite, openEHR
4 Comments