Difference between revisions of "FHIR Conformance Levels Issue Page"
(Created page with "{{FHIR Discussion Page}} Category:Active FHIR Discussion =Conformance levels= Suggest that we formally define 3 conformance levels for a given profile. Conformance applies ...") |
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* Profile XYZ is FHIR Technically conformant. | * Profile XYZ is FHIR Technically conformant. | ||
* Application DEF is FHIR-aligned | * Application DEF is FHIR-aligned | ||
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+ | =Discussion= | ||
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+ | GG: | ||
+ | * Why would we do this? what's the benefit - what actual difference will this make? | ||
+ | * How many profiles are going to be interoperability conformant? | ||
+ | * This sounds like complexity for complexity's sake to me. | ||
+ | * I don't actually know how you could write a profile that is only FHIR-aligned at this time. |
Revision as of 20:57, 27 May 2012
Contents
Conformance levels
Suggest that we formally define 3 conformance levels for a given profile. Conformance applies to the full semantics of a given profile, including all imported profiles. Conformance can be asserted both against the underlying FHIR specification (i.e. directly to the internationally-defined resources) or to another FHIR profile.
1. FHIR Interoperably conformant
This level means that the profile is both technically compliant with the FHIR specification and also means that no constraints have been introduced that would negatively impact out-of-the-box interoperability with other FHIR implementations. I.e. It should not be necessary to perform any configuration or write any code in order for another interoperably-conformant system to send or receive FHIR instances from another interoperably conformant system.
"Interoperably conformant" should be the target conformance level for all implementers, but may not be achievable for a variety of reasons such as limitations of legacy components, regulatory requirements or development timelines. The extreme looseness of resource definitions at the international level will often require non-interoperable conformance in order to construct profiles that reflect the business requirements of a particular domain. That said, Implementers and policy bodies that define profiles should carefully weigh the long term costs of the resulting interoperability issues as compared to the cost of resolving and removing the requirement driving the non-interoperable constraint.
Examples of non-interoperable constraints includes:
- Introducing “must understand” to an element
- Constraining the use of dataAbsentReason
- Changing the allowed cardinality of an element
- Constraining the value set of allowed instances such that non-supported codes will be rejected
2. FHIR Technically conformant
This level is the same as Interoperably conformant, but introduces at least one constraint that could result in interoperability issues. Technically conformant requires:
- The profile only draws on resources defined by HL7 International
- Instances are schema-compliant and Schematron-compliant with the internationally-defined resources
3. FHIR-aligned
This refers to systems that are not compliant with FHIR but are constructed using the same tooling stack, technical approach and philosophy as FHIR. In general, it will require less work for a FHIR compliant system to interoperate with a FHIR-aligned system than one that is not, but FHIR-alignment is not a desired target state for any implementation. FHIR alignment does not have any formal criteria or standing with HL7.
Vetting
An additional assertion can be made about FHIR profiles based on the extensions referenced. A profile that references only HL7-vetted extensions can be called “strict”. In theory, strict profiles should provide a greater degree of confidence in the RIM mappings and definitions that support the profile as well as non-overlap (or at least well-defined overlap) with other extensions.
Examples
Examples of conformance assertions include:
- Profile XYZ has strict FHIR Interoperability conformance.
- Application ABC is Interoperably Conformant with profile XYZ.
- Profile XYZ is FHIR Technically conformant.
- Application DEF is FHIR-aligned
Discussion
GG:
- Why would we do this? what's the benefit - what actual difference will this make?
- How many profiles are going to be interoperability conformant?
- This sounds like complexity for complexity's sake to me.
- I don't actually know how you could write a profile that is only FHIR-aligned at this time.