This page is part of the Electronic Medicinal Product Information (ePI) FHIR Implementation Guide (v1.0.0: STU1) based on FHIR v5.0.0. This is the current published version. For a full list of available versions, see the Directory of published versions
This Implementation Guide was developed under the auspices of the HL7 Vulcan Accelerator’s Electronic Product Information project team and the Innovative Medicines Initiative’s (IMI) Gravitate-Health project. Contributing individuals and organisations are as follows (in no particular order):
Current ePI project Co-Chairs:
Project Team Members:
Vulcan Program Management
With contributions from other members who have from time to time, or quietly, participated in meetings, attended conference calls, and supported the core team during the development process.
If you are interested in participating in the Vulcan ePI project, further information can be found on HL7 Vulcan’s Confluence pages here.
The Gravitate Health project is a public – private partnership with 39 members from Europe and the US, co-led by University of Oslo (coordinator) and Pfizer (industry lead), funded by the Innovative Medicines Initiative (IMI) – a joint undertaking of the European Commission, the European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations (EFPIA), IMI2 Associated Partners.
HL7 FHIR® accelerators are a successful catalyst for standards development and adoption.
The vision for an Accelerator dedicated to connecting clinical research and healthcare was solidified in September 2019 by a group of invested representatives from government agencies, academia, technology companies, standards development organizations, patients, and industry consortiums. The Vulcan Accelerator serves the needs of the clinical and translational research communities through the implementation of HL7 FHIR standardized data exchange.
Vulcan’s goal is to create an ecosystem where research stakeholders collaborate on common use cases with the purpose of simplifying the research communities exchange of data using common standards with health records. Vulcan consists of organizations who represent the entire research stakeholder community including vendors, sponsors, CROs, consulting companies, sites, patient organizations, government agencies and growing.
BR&R creates and promotes standards to facilitate biomedical research and any subsequent regulatory evaluation of the safety, efficacy and quality of medical products that may arise from research.
The BR&R workgroup areas of interest encompass clinical and translational research, both regulated and non-regulated, and the subsequent regulatory submissions and information exchanges to bring new products to market and to ensure safe use throughout the product lifecycle.
This Work Group facilitates the development of common standards and the maintenance and enhancement of the research-focused domain analysis model for clinical research information management across a variety of organizations, including national and international government agencies and regulatory bodies, private researchers and research organizations, sponsored research, CROs and other interested entities.