This page is part of the FHIR Specification (v5.0.0-ballot: R5 Ballot - see ballot notes). The current version which supercedes this version is 5.0.0. For a full list of available versions, see the Directory of published versions
FHIR Infrastructure | Maturity Level: 1 | Informative |
Detailed Descriptions for the elements in the ParticipantLiving pattern.
ParticipantLiving | |
Definition | A pattern followed by resources that represent the participant in some activity, process, or responsible for providing information about a resource. |
Short Display | Participant Pattern |
Cardinality | 0..* |
Type | ParticipantContactable |
ParticipantLiving.birthDate | |
Definition | The date of birth for the individual. |
Short Display | The date of birth for the individual |
Cardinality | 0..1 |
Type | date |
ParticipantLiving.gender | |
Definition | Administrative Gender - the gender that the participant is considered to have for administration and record keeping purposes. |
Short Display | male | female | other | unknown |
Cardinality | 0..1 |
Terminology Binding | AdministrativeGender (Required) |
Type | code |
Requirements | Needed for identification of the individual, in combination with (at least) name and birth date. |
ParticipantLiving.photo | |
Definition | Image of the participant. |
Short Display | Image of the participant |
Cardinality | 0..* |
Type | Attachment |
Requirements | Many EHR systems have the capability to capture an image of the participant. Fits with newer social media usage too. |
ParticipantLiving.communication | |
Definition | The ISO-639-1 alpha 2 code in lower case for the language, optionally followed by a hyphen and the ISO-3166-1 alpha 2 code for the region in upper case; e.g. "en" for English, or "en-US" for American English versus "en-AU" for Australian English. |
Short Display | The language which can be used to communicate with the participant |
Cardinality | 0..* |
Terminology Binding | Common Languages (Preferred but limited to All Languages) |
Type | CodeableConcept |
Requirements | Most systems in multilingual countries will want to convey language. Not all systems actually need the regional dialect. |