SMART on FHIR: a standards-based, interoperable apps platform for electronic health records
Harvard University · Harvard–MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology
Abstract
In early 2010, Harvard Medical School and Boston Children's Hospital began an interoperability project with the distinctive goal of developing a platform to enable medical applications to be written once and run unmodified across different healthcare IT systems. The project was called Substitutable Medical Applications and Reusable Technologies (SMART).
We adopted contemporary web standards for application programming interface transport, authorization, and user interface, and standard medical terminologies for coded data. In our initial design, we created our own openly licensed clinical data models to enforce consistency and simplicity. During the second half of 2013, we updated SMART to take advantage of the clinical data models and the application-programming interface described in a new, openly licensed Health Level Seven draft standard called Fast Health Interoperability Resources (FHIR). Signaling our adoption of the emerging FHIR standard, we called the new platform SMART on FHIR.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 132.13
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 28
Authors
5- JCJoshua C. MandelCorresponding
Harvard University, Harvard–MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology
- DKDavid Kreda
Harvard University
- KDKenneth D. Mandl
Harvard University, Harvard–MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology
- ISIsaac S. Kohane
Harvard University, Harvard–MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology
- RRRachel Ramoni
Harvard University
Topics & keywords
- Interoperability
- Application programming interface
- Computer science
- Health care
- Consistency (knowledge bases)
- Interface (matter)
- Open standard
- Software engineering
- Industry, innovation and infrastructure