Informējam, ka Sistēma pielāgota darbam ar interneta pārlūkprogrammu Internet Explorer (8. un jaunākām versijām) un Mozilla Firefox (3.6 un jaunākām versijām).
Izmantojot citu interneta pārlūkprogrammu, brīdinām, ka Sistēmas funkcionalitāte var tikt traucēta.
The concepts of Enterprise Architecture are well established within Information Technology as a whole, also embracing generally well known major trends and principles such as under the heading of "Service Oriented Architecture" (SOA) through the last 5+ years. Within healthcare, the use and adoption of Information Technology is growing, but still far from having reached a mature state, especially concerning an
effective substitution of the traditional paper based patient health record in general. Various proprietary and more or less standards based systems exist, in a usually rather fragmented way, with limited integration and interoperability, typically only at best partly supporting the health enterprise, compared to what should be possible. A number of major Health Informatics standards have emerged and developed into full and formal state through the last five years. These standards do not least address parts of the health domain which are rather specific for this sector, within Information Technology. This Technical Report provides an analysis of how these standards are being used and may be used, together with other non health informatics specific standards, in line with the main tendencies outside health informatics, and especially in regard to Enterprise Architecture, as in widely acknowledged and contemporary architecture frameworks, such as TOGAF (The Open Group Architecture Framework, www.opengroup.org) and EA3 (which is taught by leading universities such as Carnegie Mellon, www.cmu.edu). In this respect, the HISA standard is expected to play an important role, as dealing with basic aspects of services and architecture within health, together with other major and complementary standards such as 13606, CONTSYS and HL7.
Reģistrācijas numurs (WIID)
39287
Darbības sfēra
The concepts of Enterprise Architecture are well established within Information Technology as a whole, also embracing generally well known major trends and principles such as under the heading of "Service Oriented Architecture" (SOA) through the last 5+ years. Within healthcare, the use and adoption of Information Technology is growing, but still far from having reached a mature state, especially concerning an
effective substitution of the traditional paper based patient health record in general. Various proprietary and more or less standards based systems exist, in a usually rather fragmented way, with limited integration and interoperability, typically only at best partly supporting the health enterprise, compared to what should be possible. A number of major Health Informatics standards have emerged and developed into full and formal state through the last five years. These standards do not least address parts of the health domain which are rather specific for this sector, within Information Technology. This Technical Report provides an analysis of how these standards are being used and may be used, together with other non health informatics specific standards, in line with the main tendencies outside health informatics, and especially in regard to Enterprise Architecture, as in widely acknowledged and contemporary architecture frameworks, such as TOGAF (The Open Group Architecture Framework, www.opengroup.org) and EA3 (which is taught by leading universities such as Carnegie Mellon, www.cmu.edu). In this respect, the HISA standard is expected to play an important role, as dealing with basic aspects of services and architecture within health, together with other major and complementary standards such as 13606, CONTSYS and HL7.