This page is part of the US Core (v6.0.0-ballot: STU6 Ballot 1) based on FHIR R4. The current version which supercedes this version is 5.0.1. For a full list of available versions, see the Directory of published versions
Official URL: http://hl7.org/fhir/us/core/ImplementationGuide/hl7.fhir.us.core | Version: 6.0.0-ballot | |||
Active as of 2022-09-23 | Computable Name: USCore | |||
Copyright/Legal: Used by permission of HL7 International, all rights reserved Creative Commons License |
This ballot addresses the following:
We have updated US Core to include the U.S. Core Data for Interoperability (USCDI) v3 Data Elements and Classes that the Office of the National Coordinator (ONC) published in July of 2021:
Where possible, new and updated content are highlighted with green text and background
Key updates and detailed changes between this and prior versions are available on the US Core Change Log and Changes Between Versions pages.
This guide and the US Core profiles have become the foundation for US Realm FHIR implementation guides. This annual release reflects changes to U.S. Core Data for Interoperability (USCDI) v3 and comments and requests from the US Realm FHIR community. (The Future of US Core page outlines this approach to yearly updates.) US Core has benefitted from testing and guidance by the Argonaut Project Team. Their feedback continues to lay the groundwork for documenting the US Core Profile design, interactions, requirements, and guidelines for patient data access and ONC Certification testing. Under the guidance of HL7 and the HL7 US Realm Steering Committee, the content will expand in future versions to meet the needs specific to the US Realm.
The US Core Implementation Guide is based on FHIR Version R4. It defines the minimum constraints on the FHIR resources to create the US Core Profiles. It also documents the minimum FHIR RESTful interactions for each US Core Profiles to access patient data. Establishing the “floor” of standards to promote interoperability and adoption through common implementation allows for further standards development evolution for specific use cases. There are two different ways to implement US Core:
For a detailed description of these different usages of US Core, see the Conformance Requirements page.
The US Core requirements were originally developed, balloted, and published in FHIR DSTU2 as part of the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) sponsored Data Access Framework (DAF) project. The Argonaut Data Query Implementation Guide superseded DAF and documented security and authorization and the querying of the 2015 Edition Common Clinical Data Set (CCDS) and static documents. US Core descended directly from the Argonaut guide to support FHIR Version STU3 and eventually FHIR R4 and The ONC U.S. Core Data for Interoperability (USCDI).
This Guide is divided into several pages, which are listed at the top of each page in the menu bar.
The following actors are part of the US Core IG:
An application that initiates a data access request to retrieve patient data. The US Core Requestor is the client in a client-server interaction. The terms “US Core Requestor”, and “Client” are used interchangeably throughout this guide and are not meant to limit this actor to only patient and provider apps. For example, payers and other users can use the same technology. These terms are a short-hand notation for “user application”.
A system that responds to the data access request providing patient data. The US Core responder is the server in a client-server interaction. The terms “US Core Responder”, “Server”, and “EHR” are used interchangeably throughout this guide and are not meant to limit this actor to electronic health record systems. For example, HIEs, care coordination platforms, population health systems, etc., can use the same technology. These terms are a short-hand notation for “interoperable healthcare platform”.
The list of US Core Profiles is shown below. Each profile identifies which core elements, extensions, vocabularies, and value sets SHALL be present in the resource when using this profile. Together they promote interoperability and adoption through common implementation and provide the floor for standards development for specific use cases. See the USCDI page, for a mapping to the U.S. Core Data for Interoperability (USCDI).
A simple narrative summary gives each profile’s requirements and guidance. A formal hierarchical table presents a logical view of the content in both a differential and snapshot view and references to appropriate terminologies and examples are provided.
For systems that support the US Core Profile content structure and the RESTful interactions defined for a resource, the requirements are formally defined in the US Core CapabilityStatements. In addition, each profile page has a Quick Start Section that documents the required FHIR RESTful search and read operations. These sections demonstrate how to access a patient’s clinical and administrative data:
See the FHIR specification for details on FHIR RESTful Search API and the SMART App Launch Framework for how an application gets access to a patient record.
Primary Authors: Brett Marquard, Eric Haas, Gay Dolin