Margaret Lindquist | Content Strategist | June 24, 2024
The goal of healthcare interoperability is to allow multiple systems to share patient and other data, securely store it, and make it accessible to the providers, patients, payers, and public health administrators who need to view it.
The Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) defines healthcare interoperability as "the ability of different information systems, devices, and applications to access, exchange, and cooperatively use data in a coordinated manner, within and across organizational, regional, and national boundaries, to provide timely and seamless portability of information and optimize the health of individuals and populations globally.” Key interoperability elements are open data schemas and standards that let healthcare providers share information, regardless of the EHR software they use, and make that information available to patients through multiple channels, including mobile devices, websites, and kiosks.
Interoperability projects were originally focused on systems within a single health enterprise—for example, making sure that patient data collected by a primary care physician flowed to labs and imaging so that electronic orders could be linked to billing and claims submissions. Now efforts are underway to develop interoperable systems that span the healthcare ecosystem—including providers, patients, payers, regulators, and researchers—at national and global levels.
Interoperability is the capacity for each system on a network to communicate with other systems to share, consolidate, and use data. Interoperable applications and systems automatically exchange data in such a way that the data is accessible, accurate, and secure, with little human interaction needed. Interoperability is possible only when all stakeholders—healthcare organizations, governments, payers, and other players—agree on the standards, technologies, and terminology needed for the exchange of data between diverse systems.
Interoperability in healthcare describes the capacity for disparate health data systems to share data, regardless of geographic location, and allow that data to be used by providers, researchers, and public health managers to improve patient experiences and community health. Interoperable health systems have their own set of standards and guidelines, with the goal of creating a network of shared health data so that providers can access complete, accurate patient data no matter where the patient has previously received care. With such a system in place, clinicians can make better decisions and provide better care, patients can take ownership of their data and care options, community leaders can act on early warning signs of public health issues, and finance teams can help ensure prompt and accurate billing and claims reimbursement.
Interoperable healthcare systems exchange all sorts of patient data, including basic information about treatment plans, prescriptions, and lab test results, demographic information, and immunization records. Most patients expect—or hope—that information related to visits, treatment plans, medication histories, and immunizations is available to them through interoperable healthcare systems. But industry and government health leaders have a bigger vision for the types of data that will be exchanged, which includes demographic information (such as ethnicity, age, and language spoken), genetic predispositions, allergies and sensitivities, and provider communications. According to research from the US Department of Health and Human Services, a more standardized approach to collecting detailed information—for example, details about lifestyle patterns, such as food choices and smoking habits—will help uncover healthcare disparities and allow for personalized interventions by care providers.
Key Takeaways
One of the biggest challenges in healthcare is creating electronic health records (EHRs) that are patient-centric rather than provider-centric. A person’s medical history is likely to be scattered across the different EHR systems used by different providers, making it difficult for clinicians to access accurate and complete information and make appropriate treatment decisions. The situation is even more challenging for public health officers and medical researchers because the records that could support the study of national health trends and the development of new treatments are contained in thousands of data silos in many different locations. New government policies, organizational processes, and technologies are key to easing the flow of information within and among organizations while adhering to relevant privacy rules.
Interoperable healthcare systems include health information exchanges (HIEs), which pull together medical information from different departments within a healthcare system, as well as qualified health information networks (QHINs), which share data at the national level. The ultimate goal is a unified global health network that will not only enable better care at the patient level but also let researchers and public health officials identify and address public health challenges at an early stage. “Why is there a global financial database that knows your entire credit history but not a global healthcare one?” asks Larry Ellison, founder and CTO of Oracle. “If you have an accident, the hospital will know your financial records but not if you’re allergic to penicillin.”
When data flows among patients, providers, payers, and community health organizations, healthcare becomes more efficient and cost-effective—but more important, care and health outcomes improve. For example, the CommonWell Health Alliance, a vendor-neutral platform that encompasses 34,000 provider sites and 231 million patients, gives providers access to a nationwide network of comprehensive patient data—not just data from a single facility or system—with the goal of helping to improve care coordination and health outcomes across the United States.
The Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) defines the following four levels of healthcare interoperability, some of which can be achieved with currently available technologies, while others will require new technology and organizational process innovations. These levels describe the data exchange schema and standards that should allow data sharing throughout the healthcare ecosystem, no matter what applications or vendors are used. Each level builds on the previous one.
Foundational interoperability is the most basic level, whereby data securely travels from one system or device to another. For example, at this level providers would be able to share simple data such as emails or PDFs, but the next level of interoperability would be necessary to enable the system to understand, process, and integrate the data.
Structural interoperability is achieved when the format of data exchange between systems is standardized so data can be input and output by multiple systems or devices. Data types range from simple text, codes, identifiers, and address formats to images and video. Standards such as HL7 FHIR (Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources) help ensure that patient data is consistently shared across systems using various forms of exchange protocols. With this data at hand, providers can more easily identify gaps in care and provide recommendations that become part of the longitudinal patient record.
Semantic interoperability establishes a common vocabulary for inputting data into health systems, such as ICD-10 codes for mortality statistics and the Logical Observation Identifier Names and Codes standard for lab tests and results. The semantics are important in ensuring that different systems present relevant concepts that are meaningful and accurate.
Organizational interoperability requires more than just technical know-how. Regulatory policies, legal oversight, and communal acceptance are key to helping the health industry create, manage, and advance interoperability. For example, the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement, from the US Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, aims to establish universal governance and policy guidelines for interoperability, simplifying organization-to-organization connectivity and allowing patients to access their entire medical record through a single interface.
It’s impossible to understate the importance of sharing information across healthcare enterprises. For some patients, it can literally be the difference between life and death. Organizations must put collaboration ahead of competition to help ensure that clinicians have the information they need at their fingertips to make the most informed medical decisions and patients can access a complete, accurate record of their healthcare journey to help them maintain or enhance their health. Meantime, public health officials need to better understand community health statuses and opportunities for targeted care, payers need accurate data to process bills and manage risk, and researchers need to find new ways to prevent and cure illnesses. Read on to learn more about the benefits of healthcare interoperability.
Advances in interoperability promise to enhance the quality, efficiency, and cost-effectiveness of healthcare, but there are challenges to overcome. Health technology vendors, care providers, payers, patients, and government legislators and regulators all have a role to play in meeting these challenges, and it’s only through collaboration that health information will finally start becoming readily available. While experts understand that better healthcare interoperability will improve healthcare and patient outcomes, they face numerous challenges as they work to make vital connections between disparate systems that contain unprecedented amounts of data. Read on to learn more.
Few industries are as heavily regulated as healthcare, as the risks associated with systemic failures have life-changing consequences. Healthcare organizations need robust compliance programs, policies, and procedures, particularly for high-risk treatment areas, as well as training programs aimed at making sure all employees understand their compliance responsibilities. One such effort is a voluntary program, run by the ONC, that provides test tools and procedures to health IT developers to certify that they’re building a baseline of logging, security, and data-sharing capabilities into their EHR software modules.
Oracle Health’s open systems-based interoperability products give clinicians access to relevant information from multiple sources, both inside the health system and from third parties, such the CommonWell Health Alliance and other health exchanges.
Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) is built to run every healthcare workload, from legacy applications to modern AI-enabled services. Oracle Health Seamless Exchange connects external and internal patient data to provide a comprehensive record of a patient’s care, regardless of the source. It deduplicates redundant information and presents data in a simplified workflow, reducing data overload for practitioners. Healthcare organizations can also identify third parties as trusted sources and allow them to write directly into the local record so clinicians can spend less time gathering information and more time connecting with patients.
What is an example of interoperability?
Healthcare system interoperability helps ensure that patient data is up to date and available to providers, no matter where the patient is seeking treatment. Consider the example of a patient on vacation who’s rushed unconscious to a local hospital because of an adverse reaction to a prescription. True system interoperability would allow clinicians at that hospital to access the patient’s complete medical history, regardless of the EHR used by the patient’s primary provider.
How do you explain interoperability?
Interoperable systems are those that automatically share data, regardless of the system vendor.
What is an example of interoperability in nursing?
Interoperable health systems make patient data readily available to nurses as they perform their duties. For example, a nurse could access a patient’s health record and determine their vaccination status, medications, and the reasons for previous visits to the healthcare facility—or other facilities—all before their first conversation.
Learn why collaboration is the new mantra for healthcare organizations looking to securely share and consolidate patient data to improve health outcomes.