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  2. Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fast_Healthcare...

    The Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR, / f aɪər /, like fire) standard is a set of rules and specifications for the secure exchange of electronic health care data. It is designed to be flexible and adaptable, so that it can be used in a wide range of settings and with different health care information systems.

  3. Consolidated Clinical Document Architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consolidated_Clinical...

    [1] [2] [3] All certified Electronic health records in the United States are required to export medical data using the C-CDA standard. [4] While the standard was developed primarily for the United States as the C-CDA incorporates references to terminologies and value set required by US regulation, it has also been used internationally.

  4. Conformance testing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conformance_testing

    Conformance testing is applied in various industries where a product or service must meet specific quality and/or regulatory standards. This includes areas such as: [1] [3] [4] [7] [8] biocompatibility proofing; data and communications protocol engineering; document engineering; electronic and electrical engineering; medical procedure proofing

  5. Health Level 7 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_Level_7

    SAIF is a way of thinking about producing specifications that explicitly describe the governance, conformance, compliance, and behavioral semantics that are needed to achieve computable semantic working interoperability.

  6. Health Level Seven International - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_Level_Seven...

    HL7 was founded in 1987 to produce a standard for the exchange of data with hospital information systems.Donald W. Simborg, the CEO of Simborg Systems took the initiative to create the HL7 organization with the aim to allow for wider use of its own exchange protocol (known as the StatLAN protocol, originally defined at the University of California, San Francisco in the late 1970s).

  7. Token-based replay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Token-based_replay

    Token-based replay technique is a conformance checking algorithm [1] that checks how well a process conforms with its model by replaying each trace on the model (in Petri net notation). [2] Using the four counters produced tokens, consumed tokens, missing tokens, and remaining tokens, it records the situations where a transition is forced to ...

  8. PDF/A - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PDF/A

    PDF is a standard for encoding documents in an "as printed" form that is portable between systems. However, the suitability of a PDF file for archival preservation depends on options chosen when the PDF is created: most notably, whether to embed the necessary fonts for rendering the document; whether to use encryption; and whether to preserve additional information from the original document ...

  9. Conformance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conformance

    Conformance is how well something, such as a product, service or a system, meets a specified standard and may refer more specifically to: Conformance testing , testing to determine whether a product or system meets some specified standard