AU Core Implementation Guide
1.0.0-ci-build - CI Build
AU Core Implementation Guide, published by HL7 Australia. This guide is not an authorized publication; it is the continuous build for version 1.0.0-ci-build built by the FHIR (HL7® FHIR® Standard) CI Build. This version is based on the current content of https://github.com/hl7au/au-fhir-core/ and changes regularly. See the Directory of published versions
Page standards status: Informative |
In some circumstances, the content referred to in the resource reference does not have an independent existence apart from the resource that contains it - it cannot be identified independently, and nor can it have its own independent transaction scope. For example, use of a Medication resource to represent medicinal product identification within the context of a MedicationRequest. In these circumstances the resource can be contained.
In AU Core profiles:
Further guidance about the general use case for contained resources can be found in the base FHIR specification.
A server may send "additional" elements beyond those flagged with Must Support in an AU Core profile. Additional elements are often required by other profiles the system may conform to, allowing local requirements, including technical and workflow context for the resource, to be reflected and extending the health information supported in exchanges. For this reason, extensibility is generally encouraged and expected in AU Core profiles. Only in some exceptionally rare use case profiles are rules tightened to limit the nature of additional information that can be sent. Specification authors should strive to enable greater interoperability and software re-use by not reducing an element's cardinality.
Depending on local requirements, a client application may ignore these "additional" elements, may treat the data as for rendering only, or be capable of recognising and using the element.
Patient
The table below provides guidance on representing communication preferences for a patient. Blank cells in the table indicate that the given element is absent from the resource.
Scenario | communication.language | communication.preferred | extension:interpreterRequired | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Preferred language is English | No element sent, as per the guidance in the Comments of Patient.communication | |||
Preferred language is other than English | language.coding | 'true' | ||
Interpreter required, language is known | language.coding | 'true' | 'true' | |
Interpreter required, language is not known | 'true' | |||
Interpreter is not required | 'false' | |||
Communicates with multiple languages | language.coding | Each language instantiated in separate communication nodes; communication.preferred and extension:interpreterRequired may be sent as needed. |
Example: Patient resource with interpreter required and language is known
{
"resourceType" : "Patient",
...
"extension" : [
{
"url" : "http://hl7.org/fhir/StructureDefinition/patient-interpreterRequired",
"valueBoolean" : true
}
]
},
...
"communication" : [
{
"language" : {
"coding" : [
{
"system" : "urn:ietf:bcp:47",
"code" : "yue"
}
],
"text" : "Cantonese"
},
"preferred" : true
}
]
}
When exchanging Procedure
and Condition
resources using AU Core profiles there may be a need to represent a relevant body site and associated laterality using CodeableConcept
elements. In FHIR, body site and associated laterality can be recorded in various ways and implementers are encourage to consider the following points when implementing:
bodySite
element is not Must Support in AU Core profiles, there is no expectation to fill or meaningfully consume this element.CodeableConcept.text
element is system populated and may reflect more specific detail than the CodeableConcept
.coding concepts provided.AU Core provides the following guidance for what to do in each of the following scenarios:
To support consistent representation the following is recommended for each of these cases, this approach can be applied to either Condition or Procedure profiles:
1. Primary finding/procedure code
only (pre-coordinated code including body site and laterality)
code
element to contain information on body site with laterality.Example: Condition resource cellulitis of right knee
{
"resourceType" : "Condition",
"id" : "cellulitis",
...
"code" : {
"coding" : [
{
"system" : "http://snomed.info/sct",
"code" : "10633311000119108",
"display" : "Cellulitis of right knee"
},
"text" : "Cellulitis of right knee"
]
}
...
}
2. Primary finding/procedure code
only (pre-coordinated code including body site without laterality and separate laterality qualifier)
code
element:
code.coding
contains the primary concept (no body site information).code.text
is used to describe concept fully, this can include information on recorded laterality e.g. ', Right'.Example: Condition resource showing coded condition that includes body site, laterality as text only
{
"resourceType" : "Condition",
"id" : "cellulitis",
...
"code" : {
"coding" : [
{
"system" : "http://snomed.info/sct",
"code" : "13301002",
"display" : "Cellulitis of knee"
},
"text" : "Cellulitis of knee, Right"
]
}
...
}
3. Coded body site
with laterality and separate primary finding/procedure code
.
code.coding
contains the primary concept including body site without laterality.code.text
describes the concept fully, this can include information on recorded body site and laterality as text.bodySite
may be supplied containing the coded body site with laterality.Example: Condition resource showing coded condition, coded body site that includes laterality
{
"resourceType" : "Condition",
"id" : "cellulitis",
...
"code" : {
"coding" : [
{
"system" : "http://snomed.info/sct",
"code" : "128045006",
"display" : "Cellulitis"
},
"text" : "Cellulitis, Right Knee"
]
},
"bodySite" : [
{
"coding" : [{
"system" : "http://snomed.info/sct",
"code" : "6757004",
"display" : "Structure of right knee region"
}],
"text" : "Right Knee"
}
]
...
}
4. Coded body site
without laterality and separate coded laterality qualifier and a primary finding/procedure code
.
code
element:
code.coding
contains the primary concept alone (no body site or laterality).code.text
describes the concept fully, this can include information on recorded body site and laterality as text.bodySite.coding
contains the coded body site without laterality.bodySite.text
describes the body site concept fully, this can include information on recorded laterality as text e.g. ', Right'.bodySite.text
Example: Condition resource with coded condition, coded body site, laterality as text only
{
"resourceType" : "Condition",
"id" : "cellulitis",
...
"code" : {
"coding" : [
{
"system" : "http://snomed.info/sct",
"code" : "128045006",
"display" : "Cellulitis"
},
"text" : "Cellulitis, Knee, Right"
]
},
"bodySite" : [
{
"coding" : [{
"system" : "http://snomed.info/sct",
"code" : "72696002",
"display" : "Knee region structure"
}],
"text" : "Knee, Right"
}
]
...
}
Searching resources is defined by the FHIR RESTful API and included here for informative purposes. The AU Core CapabilityStatements document the server and client rules for the RESTful interactions described in this guide.
All the search interactions in this guide use the GET
command with the following syntax:
GET [base]/[Resource-type]?[parameter1]{:m1|m2|...}={c1|c2|...}[value1{,value2,...}]{&[parameter2]{:m1|m2|...}={c1|c2|...}[value1{,value2,...}]&...}
token
type SearchParameter (how to search by token), the syntax {system|}[code]
means that the system value is optional for the client to supply.:reference
type SearchParameter (how to search by reference), the syntax {Type/}[id]
means that the Type value is optional for the client to supply:date
type SearchParameter (how to search by date), the syntax {gt|lt|ge|le}[date]
means the date comparators "gt", "lt", "ge", and "le" are optional. Date type searches without a comparator prefix are equivalent to searches with the "eq" comparator even if a server does not support the comparator.In the simplest case, a search is executed by performing a GET operation in the RESTful framework:
GET [base]/[Resource-type]?name=value&...
For this RESTful search, the parameters are a series of name=[value] pairs encoded in the URL. The search parameter names are defined for each resource. For example, the Observation resource has the name "code" for searching on the LOINC or SNOMED CT-AU code. For more information, see the FHIR RESTful Search API.