OpenHIE is a global mission-driven community of practice dedicated to improving the health of the underserved through open and collaborative development and support of country driven, large scale health information sharing architectures. The OpenHIE community supports interoperability by creating a reusable architectural framework called the OpenHIE Architecture that introduces a service-oriented approach which maximally leverages health information standards, enables flexible implementation by country partners, and supports interchangeability of individual components.
The purpose of the OpenHIE Architecture Specification is to:
- Provide an overview of the OpenHIE Architecture
- Articulate the requirements for OpenHIE components
- Articulate the workflows (data exchanges) that are currently recognized as data exchange patterns to follow
- Provide a reference for implementers to use in their architecture and/or implementations
To get started, see https://guides.ohie.org/arch-spec/get-started
The primary users of the OpenHIE Architecture Specification typically include implementers, software development teams and Ministries of Health.
English, some documentation available in French and Spanish.
Content
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
D2 | D2 Data interchange and interoperability
C1 | C1 Census and population information systems
C11 | C11 Terminology and classification systems
C6 | C6 Identification registries and directories
B5 | B5 Learning and training systems
D8 | D8 Shared Health Record and Health Information Repositories
OpenHIE is a community of practice and its content is open to all. The online and bi-directional open structure makes it challenging to fully appreciate how far adoption of OpenHIE concepts have gone. However at a recent face-to-face community event in Malawi there was representation from over 30 countries from various regions all over the globe. Countries and implementers shared their different journeys in advancing health information exchange in their countries based on the OpenHIE architecture framework.
The following countries have included or referenced the OpenHIE framework as part of their Digital Health strategy, eHealth strategy, HIS strategy, or related framework, or have referenced the OpenHIE architecture framework as part of pre- or in-service training programs:
Côte d\'Ivoire, Haiti, Kenya, Malawi, Nepal, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Sri Lanka, Tanzania, Uganda
OpenHIE and its component framework (e.g. Client Registry, Health Worker Registry, Shared Health Record, Terminology Services, etc.) support several standards for sending, receiving and storing clinical and/or administrative data related to patient care. Find out more at:
https://guides.ohie.org/arch-spec/architecture-specification/standards-and-profiles
OpenHIE workflows are the technical data exchange patterns for sharing health data between one or more of the OpenHIE Architecture
components and/or other health information systems. OpenHIE uses community forums and Architecture Summits to incorporate community review and feedback around all of its offerings. It is made up of organizations that endorse the OpenHIE framework and collaborate on OpenHIE resources.
ADX, HL7 FHIR, LOINC, SNOMED
Interoperability Layer
Facility Registry
Finance and Insurance Service
Health Management Information Service
Shared Health Record
Terminology Service
Logistics Management Information Service
Client Registry
Healthworker Registry
Product Catalogue
Point of service
All maturity model assessments are self-reported by the funded organization leading the content development of the global good
https://guides.ohie.org/arch-spec/architecture-specification/standards-and-profiles
Architectural Documentation URLOpenHIE is a community of government officials, tech developers, implementers, and others working in digital health information systems. This community supports and improves upon the OpenHIE Architecture - our conceptual approach to the exchange of health information - through open and collaborative practices. It is the members of the OpenHIE community who work in many capacities to implement the solutions and report back on their approach and experience. This information is then distilled to others who are looking to implement and the voluntary cycle continues to set-up structures that can be customized for unique environments.
This process can look like: OpenHIE members want to understand what countries are working on and how the community can support country
digital health strategies to develop or build upon their health information exchange architecture. Country teams share real world needs and
experiences that result in peer-learning and recommendations that influence the direction of the community itself. Software development teams bring their tools and experiences to country teams in support of the work they are doing. This cycle of sharing real world experiences and bringing knowledge back into the community has a direct impact on the workflows and standards that make up the OpenHIE framework.
This community is OPEN, so all who are interested in joining, sharing, or learning from others are welcome and can do so in our many different activities and practices.
Regenstrief Institute is the acting secretariat for the OpenHIE Community that curates the OpenHIE Architecture Framework and is based in the United States. PEPFAR supports the OpenHIE secretariat to handle leadership when it comes to community engagement, growth, and resource support. Resources and the framework are intended to be constantly evolving as standards and implementer needs change over time. This evolution happens through the sharing and in-kind support of community members and partner organizations. Key funders/investors of the work over the past 5 years are PEPFAR, Digital Square, Global Fund.