A person who is directly or indirectly involved in the provisioning of healthcare or related services.
A person who is directly or indirectly involved in the provisioning of healthcare or related services.
If the element is present, it must have either a @value, an @id, or extensions
An identifier that applies to this person in this role.
Whether this practitioner's record is in active use.
The name(s) associated with the practitioner.
A contact detail for the practitioner, e.g. a telephone number or an email address.
Administrative Gender - the gender that the person is considered to have for administration and record keeping purposes.
The date of birth for the practitioner.
Indicates if the practitioner is deceased or not.
Address(es) of the practitioner that are not role specific (typically home address).
Work addresses are not typically entered in this property as they are usually role dependent.
Image of the person.
The official qualifications, certifications, accreditations, training, licenses (and other types of educations/skills/capabilities) that authorize or otherwise pertain to the provision of care by the practitioner.
For example, a medical license issued by a medical board of licensure authorizing the practitioner to practice medicine within a certain locality.
A language which may be used to communicate with the practitioner, often for correspondence/administrative purposes.
The `PractitionerRole.communication` property should be used for publishing the languages that a practitioner is able to communicate with patients (on a per Organization/Role basis).
A person who is directly or indirectly involved in the provisioning of healthcare or related services.
An identifier that applies to this person's qualification.
Coded representation of the qualification.
Period during which the qualification is valid.
Organization that regulates and issues the qualification.
A person who is directly or indirectly involved in the provisioning of healthcare or related services.
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.
Indicates whether or not the person prefers this language (over other languages he masters up a certain level).