Friday 15 February 2019

HL7 AND SNOMED INTERNATIONAL ANNOUNCE AGREEMENT FOR FREE SET OF TERMS FOR USE WITH INTERNATIONAL PATIENT SUMMARY

Orlando, Fl., Feb 15 (Bernama-GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- SNOMED International and Health Level Seven International (HL7) announce today the formalization of a license agreement in which a relevant ‘Free for Use’ Set of SNOMED CT coded concepts will be used within the HL7 International Patient Summary (IPS).

Health Level Seven International (HL7) is a not-for-profit, ANSI-accredited standards developing organization dedicated to providing a comprehensive framework and related standards for the exchange, integration, sharing and retrieval of electronic health information that supports clinical practice and the management, delivery and evaluation of health services.
 
SNOMED International is a not-for-profit, member-owned and driven international organization charged with maintaining and releasing the SNOMED CT clinical terminology product; the world’s most comprehensive clinical terminology. Presently comprised of 38 Member countries globally, SNOMED International supports the role that structured clinical terminology plays in cross border migration, and by extension the delivery of health care services.
 
An IPS document is an electronic health record extract containing essential healthcare information for use in the unscheduled, cross-border care scenario, as well as for local, regional and other care scenarios. It is international in scope and fully aligned with CEN’s upcoming European Standard for the Patient Summary.  The SNOMED CT International Patient Summary (IPS) Free set consists of more than 8,000 terms for use in implementations of the HL7 CDA R2 and FHIR IPS Implementation guides word-wide.
 
Organizations, information systems, or mHealth apps creating or receiving an HL7 IPS may or may not have a SNOMED license. For organizations, regions or countries that have a SNOMED license, the SNOMED CT free set enables easier specification of the patient summary requirements and better interoperability, while for those organizations, regions, or countries that do not have SNOMED licenses, the free set enables them to use the data for care and to store within their EHRs. For some, it may provide a starting point for migration to the use of SNOMED CT.
 
The duration of the agreement is set out for a period of five years over the course of which updates to SNOMED CT content will be made in line with SNOMED International’s release schedule.
 
For more information on the HL7 International Patient Summary, visit http://international-patient-summary.net/mediawiki/index.php. For more information about HL7’s CDA standard, visit http://www.hl7.org/implement/standards/product_brief.cfm?product_id=483 . For more information on the SNOMED CT IPS Free Set, visit www.snomed.org.

http://mrem.bernama.com/viewsm.php?idm=33799

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