TEFCA adds FHIR for Interoperability
Kris Gates
Founder & CEO | Facilitator of Healthcare Innovation @ Lifestyle Health Network
Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement (TEFCA) was formed by the National Coordinator (ONC) under the authority of the 21st Century Cures Act (Act). The Act directed the ONC to convene appropriate public and private stakeholders to develop or support a trusted exchange framework for trust policies and practices and for a common agreement for exchange between health information networks.
TEFCA go live was in December 2023 and now in 2024 TEFCA is adding Fast Health Interoperability Resources (FHIR) to the TEFCA framework to achieve interoperability.
The addition of FHIR will expand TEFCA nationwide interoperability options to:
TEFCA Organizations
Recognized Coordinating Entity?(RCE)
The?RCE ?developed, updates, implements, and maintains the TEFCA Common Agreement. It is also responsible for soliciting and reviewing applications from Health Information Networks (HINs) seeking Qualified Health Information Network (QHIN) status and administering the QHIN designation and monitoring processes. The Sequoia Project currently serves as ONC’s RCE under a contract with ONC.
Qualified Health Information Network (QHIN)
A QHIN is a HIN that is a U.S. Entity that has completed the?QHIN application, onboarding, and designation process ?and is a party to the Common Agreement countersigned by the RCE. QHINs have the technical capabilities and organizational attributes to connect HINs on a nationwide scale.
Participants and Subparticipants
Participants and Subparticipants will be able to choose their QHIN and will be able to share information with all other connected entities regardless of which QHIN organization they choose.
FHIR will add interoperability as FHIR processes provide the opportunity for one organization to push discrete data fields to another organization's similar discrete data fields or to utilize FHIR resources as they are referred to by HL7 to exchange data seamlessly. https://www.hl7.org/fhir/
Kris Gates, [email protected]
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MBA, MSN, RN, CPHQ Quality and Process Improvement, HEDIS, Risk Programs, Compliance, Project Management
1 个月The Transition of Care STARS measures would benefit from automatic distribution of a hospital discharge summary and Emergency Department visit summary distribution to a Primary Care Provider. Some questions that I think about: Are the PCP groups required to pay to join this automation? Do the documents arrive into the PCP hands within two calendar days or is there a standardized route for primary source verification these documents receipt? Is there a future state where free standing laboratories can participate in this data exchange? Can we onboard MORE specialists into the data exchange such as kidney physician groups, colorectal surgeons, and ophthalmologists? This would enable the PCP groups to receive timely data on kidney health evaluations, outside BP readings, A1cs, and diabetic eye exams. This data automation would then limit PCP blind spots to care received and these diagnostic values. They currently spend extra time and money chasing down many of the records manually and they are being asked to pay for record retrieval. That eats up incentives they receive to improve care. Increased data exchange can eliminate extra costs while increasing safe effective care for healthcare consumers!
Healthcare Management Consultant | Providing Successful Program/Project Implementations ??
1 个月Great insights, Kris Gates .... The integration of FHIR interoperability within the TEFCA framework is a significant milestone for advancing care coordination across the healthcare ecosystem. By standardizing data exchange and improving access to patient information, providers can now streamline communication and minimize gaps in care. This will lead to more informed decision-making and improved outcomes, especially in complex care scenarios.
Primary Care Physician l Livdiff's Advisor | Behavioral Consultant l NLP Practioner l Leadership trainer l Tutor
1 个月Congrats Kris!