RHEx WebEx 8: Pilots Lessons Learned and
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Transcript RHEx WebEx 8: Pilots Lessons Learned and
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RHEx Pilots Lessons Learned
WebEx #8
27 September 2012
wiki.siframework.org/RHEx
Powering Secure, Web-Based Health Data Exchange
What is RESTful Health Exchange (RHEx)?
• Open source, exploratory project to apply Web
technologies to demonstrate a simple, secure, standardsbased health information exchange
– Builds the foundation for patient access to data via the Web and
mobile devices, removing barriers to broad electronic health data
exchange
– Offers a new approach to health data exchange
– From moving documents to linking to needed information
• Sponsored by the Federal Health Architecture (FHA)
program in FY12
• Continues tradition of Federal partner leadership
– Investing in innovative solutions to health IT needs
– Sharing results with entire health IT community
RHEx informs a path forward on RESTful health data exchange
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Outline
•
•
•
•
•
Overview of RHEx Pilots
RHEx Pilot with TATRC
RHEx Pilot with HealthInfoNet
Lessons Learned
Conclusions
4
RHEx Pilots
• Pilot with TATRC
– Goal: Demonstrate simple, secure RESTful health data
exchange in two phases
– Use Case: Consults/Referral
• Selected via discussions with Federal Partners
– FHA Partner: Steve Steffensen and Ollie Gray, TATRC
• Telemedicine & Advanced Technology Research Group (TATRC),
U.S. Army Medical Research & Materiel Command (MRMC)
• Pilot with HealthInfoNet
– Goal: Investigate use of RESTful approach to populate
Maine HIE (HealthInfoNet) Clinical Data Repository
– Use Case: Populate single electronic health record for
patients in medically underserved areas
– FHA Partner: Todd Rogow, HealthInfoNet
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Develop proof of concept for a World Wide Web model for health data exchange
Two different RHEx pilots
Pilot with HealthInfoNet
focuses on secure RESTful
transport between machines
Use
Case
Consult/Referral
Transport volumes of data to State
HIE Clinical Data Repository
Secure RESTful transport:
OpenID Connect for distributed
user authentication
(person in the loop)
Secure RESTful transport:
OAuth2 for service to service
authentication
(machine to machine)
Pattern
Pilot with TATRC focuses on
secure RESTful transport
between people
Security
Differences in:
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RHEx Pilots Lessons Learned
TATRC PILOT
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RHEx Pilot with TATRC
• Worked with selected federal partners to identify critical
capability gaps and select a prototype use case
– Consult results are not consistently sent to PCP today, impacting
healthcare for Veterans and Service Members
• Demonstrate secure, RESTful health data exchange in
support of Consult/Referral scenario
• Phase 1: Secure exchange
– Implement the secure exchange of health data with Direct secure
messaging and OpenID authentication
– Develop an OpenID Connect Identity Provider and a simple Web
application that will act as the Relying Party
• Phase 2: Content
– Provide a richer set of services by utilizing emerging standards to
support secure exchange of data in a granular fashion
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Sample Consultation/Referral Process
authorized consult
request
consult request
PCP
Payer
consult results
Consulting
Physician
Consult results are not consistently sent to PCP resulting in
diminished patient care
PCP = Primary Care Physician
= Paper, Fax, or Email
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Improving the Consultation/Referral Process
URL-1
Message
URL-1
Message
URL-1
authorized consult
request
consult request
PCP
Payer
Message
URL-2
consult results
Consulting
Physician
URL-2
RHEx approach allows PCP and Consulting Physician to
access and retrieve current, relevant portions of each other’s
records when they need them
PCP = Primary Care Physician
URL-1 = Consult Requests Details URL
URL-2 = Consult Results Details URL
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Phase 1 Focus
Phase 2 Focus
Links to patient vitals
PCP = Primary Care Physician
URL-3
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TATRC Pilot Architecture
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RHEx Pilots Lessons Learned
HEALTHINFONET PILOT
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Motivation for Pilot with HealthInfoNet
• Worked with HealthInfoNet to identify how RHEx technology
might be applied
– Today, patient health data from 26 hospitals and 240 ambulatory practices is
moved in near real time to the Clinical Data Repository at HealthInfoNet
– However, data is not sent today from smaller organizations who do not have the
expertise to support a traditional HL7 interface connection to the HIE
– By providing a simple, lightweight, secure method of transferring health data,
small practices in underserved areas in Maine will be able to participate in the
Maine HIE system
– In addition, this work will contribute to the foundation for standard, machine
processable formats from providers to Maine HIE for smaller healthcare
organizations
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Goal of RHEx Pilot with HealthInfoNet
• Demonstrate secure, RESTful health data exchange from a
Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) to Maine HIE
using RHEx
Islands
Community
Medical
Services
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Health data flow for connected providers
in Maine
1. After patient visit is
2. EHR system sends
complete, physician updates
message to Maine HIE.
patient’s record.
A patient can refrain
from opting out of the
Maine HIE system.
3. HL7 message is sent in near
real time.
Single VPN
Interface for
healthcare
organizations
A patient can opt out
of the Maine HIE
system.
Opted
out
X
1. Provider sends form to
Maine HIE.
2. Flow of patient data from
provider to HIE is
blocked.
X
X
X
X
X
X
3. Maine HIE deletes the patient
health data and marks patient
as “opted out”.
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Health data flow for Islands Community Medical
Services in RHEx pilot
1. After patient visit is
complete, physician
updates patient’s record.
2. EHR system automatically
generates a patient’s C32
and places it in a file
directory for transport.
3. C32 document is encrypted and sent
in near real time to Maine HIE using
HTTPS POST over the Web.
Islands Community
Medical Services
A patient can refrain
from opting out of the
Maine HIE system.
Opting out process is same as for connected providers.
A patient can opt out
of the Maine HIE
system.
X
1. Provider sends form
sent to Maine HIE.
2. Flow of patient data from
provider to HIE is
blocked.
Opted
out
3. Maine HIE deletes the patient
health data and marks patient
as “opted out”.
X
X
X
X
X
X
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HealthInfoNet Pilot Architecture
Maine HIE
Islands Community Medical Services
TLS
EHR Environment
RHEx
Client
EHR
Trigger
C32s
OAuth2
Client
Database
OAuth2
Server
OAuth2
EHR
System
DMZ
C32
RHEx
Endpoint
C32 Processing
Queue
Shared
File
System
Translation
greenC32s
Clinical Data
Repository
Integration
Engine
Translation to HL7 v2
HL7 v2
messages
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RHEx Pilots Lessons Learned
LESSONS LEARNED AND
CONCLUSIONS
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Lessons Learned, 1 of 2
• Collaboration with TATRC and HealthInfoNet has been
outstanding
• REST architectural style applies to multiple patterns of use
– Person to person
– Machine to machine
– Can be leveraged to securely transport different types of
documents/messages
• Use of REST aids in troubleshooting integration problems
– Easier to inspect network traffic
– Most network transactions can be tested via web browser
sessions
• REST is not a magic bullet - integration issues still occur
– e.g., Issues with clocks being out of sync
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Lessons Learned, 2 of 2
• Use of OAuth and OpenID Connect work well as identity and
authentication solutions
• greenC32 format useful for standardizing input to HIE
Clinical Data Repository, but standardization tool still needs
to be configured to handle different vendor C32s
• RHEx could be a solution for pushing large volumes of data
in support of health information exchange
• EHR automated trigger capability requires licensing by some
EHR vendors (cost could be prohibitive for small
independent providers)
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Conclusions
• RHEx project has explored secure, Web-based health data
exchange, building the foundation for future advances in
health care
– Allows providers and patients to exchange health data
securely over the World Wide Web
– Building foundation for secure access via mobile devices
• Concepts were tested in pilots with TATRC and
HealthInfoNet
• Lessons learned can be applied in future initiatives
– e.g., Automating Blue Button Initiative (ABBI)
RHEx is informing a path forward for the future of health data exchange
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Discussion
23
RHEx Pilots Lessons Learned
BACKUP CHARTS
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Sending A Referral
Direct
Gateway
PCP
2. Direct message with referral link is sent.
Direct
Gateway
3. User receives message.
1. PCP creates referral.
PCP System
4. User accesses link http://pcp.com/patient1/referral/1.
Consult
8. Referral viewed by user.
AHLTA Dynamic
via Document
PAWS Service
6. User authenticates.
RHEx Endpoint
Authentication
Service
OpenID OAuth
7. User redirected back to URL.
5. User redirected to OpenID Provider for authentication.
Test Data
OpenID
Provider
OpenID
Provider
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RHEx TATRC Pilot Phase 2 Model Vision
PCP EHR
Consulting Provider EHR
greenC32
Patient
Procedures
Allergies
Medications
Lab Results
Vital Signs
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Approach to Content Organization, 1 of 2
Abstract Content Model Diagram
Describes content
available and resource
URIs
Supports hierarchy of
patient data
Supports coarse
documents
URIs can point to
DICOM images or
granular patient data,
such as allergy or
medication
OData could be
implemented as a
Section Feed
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Approach to Content Organization, 2 of 2
Course Grained Link Example
https://example.org/patient1234/c32/c321.xml
Granular Content Link Example
https://example.org/patient1234/org.hl7.simplified/allergies/allergy2.xml
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Technical data flow in RHEx pilot, 1 of 2
4. OAuth2 Server authenticates client and
secure transport is established.
1. After patient visit is complete, physician
updates patient’s record in EHR system.
5. C32 document is encrypted and moved to the
RHEx endpoint over the Web using HTTPS POST.
Maine HIE
Islands Community Medical Services
TLS
EHR Environment
RHEx
Client
EHR
Trigger
C32s
OAuth2
Client
Database
OAuth2
Server
OAuth2
EHR
System
DMZ
C32
RHEx
Endpoint
C32 Processing
Queue
Shared
File
System
Translation
greenC32s
HTTP
POST
2. EHR system trigger is used to move C32
Clinical Data
http://healthinfonet.org/rhex/Islands
Community Medical
document to shared file system.
Repository
Services/1234/c32?token=e2FzZHNkOiAicG9k…
3. RHEx Client detects the update and
invokes OAuth2 workflow.
Integration
Engine
Translation to HL7 v2
HL7 v2
messages
29
Technical data flow in RHEx pilot, 2 of 2
6. RHEx endpoint moves the C32 to a processing queue
within the Maine HIE firewall, where it is decrypted.
Islands Community Medical Services
Maine HIE
TLS
EHR Environment
EHR
System
EHR
Trigger
C32s
DMZ
OAuth2
OAuth2
Server
RHEx
Client
RHEx
Endpoint
Token
Store
C32 Processing
Queue
Shared
File
System
Translation
greenC32s
HTTP
POST
7. C32 document is processed by the queue,
Clinical Data
http://healthinfonet.org/rhex/Islands
translated into greenC32 and sent to Community Medical
Integration Engine.
Repository
Services/1234/c32?token=e2FzZHNkOiAicG9k…
8. Orion sends HL7 message to Clinical Data
Repository.
Integration
Engine
Translation to HL7 v2
HL7 v2
messages
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