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Difference between revisions of "HL7 Tooling Collaborative"

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The '''HL7 Tooling Collaborative''' (HTC) is a software development initiative dedicated to providing commercial-quality highly integrated tools that support the development and implementation of HL7-compliant healthcare communications. See the [http://www.hl7toolingcollaborative.org/ HTC Website] for details.
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The '''HL7 Tooling Collaborative''' (HTC) was a loose collaboration of organizations, led by HL7 and the NHS Connecting for Health that attempted to pool resources to develop tools that would be used to develop and use HL7 specifications to further interoperability between health care applications. The initiative was disbanded in favor of a more formal organization - Open Health Tools - that has many of the same goals. Further information can be found on the Open Health Tools page [[Open Health Tools]].
 
 
In general, the HL7 Tooling Collaborative envisions building tools that:
 
*Produce machine-processable artefacts, spanning through all stages of the message design cycle (requirements, design, implementation and testing)
 
*Support end-to-end automated testing of interoperability solutions
 
*Reduce message development time, allowing the automatic translation of message designs to supplier-specific formats
 
*Facilitates consistent workflows and project management / oversight
 
*Provide a framework for publishing documentation about the artefacts generated throughout the process
 
 
 
A copy of the roadmap can be found here: [[HTC Tools Roadmap v0-3]].
 

Latest revision as of 15:56, 21 July 2008

The HL7 Tooling Collaborative (HTC) was a loose collaboration of organizations, led by HL7 and the NHS Connecting for Health that attempted to pool resources to develop tools that would be used to develop and use HL7 specifications to further interoperability between health care applications. The initiative was disbanded in favor of a more formal organization - Open Health Tools - that has many of the same goals. Further information can be found on the Open Health Tools page Open Health Tools.