The incorporation of an object oriented development approach for the construction of a community based health information system

Substantial national and international resources have been invested in the research and development of a number of health information models, eg. the National Health Information Model (NHIM), the NSW Health Community Health Information Model (CHIM), the American Joint Working Group for a Common Data...

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Main Authors: Pervan, Graham, Mcdermid, Donald
Other Authors: Neil Thelander
Format: Conference Paper
Published: Health Informatics Society of Australia 1998
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/14052
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author Pervan, Graham
Mcdermid, Donald
author2 Neil Thelander
author_facet Neil Thelander
Pervan, Graham
Mcdermid, Donald
author_sort Pervan, Graham
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Substantial national and international resources have been invested in the research and development of a number of health information models, eg. the National Health Information Model (NHIM), the NSW Health Community Health Information Model (CHIM), the American Joint Working Group for a Common Data Model (JWG-CDM) and the CEN (Comite Europeen de Normalisation) European Healthcare Record Architecture. These models have greatly assisted in the development of standard data definitions and structure, they primarily address the data requirements of an organisation and have been developed through the identification of agreed patterns of data.In Australia the NHIM has introduced a framework for health information modelling to improve theoverall information standards and support in the health industry, and the CHIM has obtained substantialendorsement as a representation of community health data. Both of these models have been developed usingEntity-Relationship (ER) techniques. An iterative approach across organisational boundaries has been takenin the development of these models focusing on the identification of common patterns of data. Thedevelopment of information systems to support the health organisations, based on these models, requires substantial further consultation to identify the business patterns, functional and physical design requirements.The Community Health Information Enterprise (CHIME), incorporating the CHIM, has undertaken thefurther consultation required and is currently utilising an Object-Oriented Programming (OOP) approach.This paper provides an insight into community based health, discusses the development approach and further proposes an information framework that extends the Object-Oriented approach to the design phase.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-140522022-09-05T03:53:38Z The incorporation of an object oriented development approach for the construction of a community based health information system Pervan, Graham Mcdermid, Donald Neil Thelander John Bennett Michael Ward Substantial national and international resources have been invested in the research and development of a number of health information models, eg. the National Health Information Model (NHIM), the NSW Health Community Health Information Model (CHIM), the American Joint Working Group for a Common Data Model (JWG-CDM) and the CEN (Comite Europeen de Normalisation) European Healthcare Record Architecture. These models have greatly assisted in the development of standard data definitions and structure, they primarily address the data requirements of an organisation and have been developed through the identification of agreed patterns of data.In Australia the NHIM has introduced a framework for health information modelling to improve theoverall information standards and support in the health industry, and the CHIM has obtained substantialendorsement as a representation of community health data. Both of these models have been developed usingEntity-Relationship (ER) techniques. An iterative approach across organisational boundaries has been takenin the development of these models focusing on the identification of common patterns of data. Thedevelopment of information systems to support the health organisations, based on these models, requires substantial further consultation to identify the business patterns, functional and physical design requirements.The Community Health Information Enterprise (CHIME), incorporating the CHIM, has undertaken thefurther consultation required and is currently utilising an Object-Oriented Programming (OOP) approach.This paper provides an insight into community based health, discusses the development approach and further proposes an information framework that extends the Object-Oriented approach to the design phase. 1998 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/14052 Health Informatics Society of Australia restricted
spellingShingle Pervan, Graham
Mcdermid, Donald
The incorporation of an object oriented development approach for the construction of a community based health information system
title The incorporation of an object oriented development approach for the construction of a community based health information system
title_full The incorporation of an object oriented development approach for the construction of a community based health information system
title_fullStr The incorporation of an object oriented development approach for the construction of a community based health information system
title_full_unstemmed The incorporation of an object oriented development approach for the construction of a community based health information system
title_short The incorporation of an object oriented development approach for the construction of a community based health information system
title_sort incorporation of an object oriented development approach for the construction of a community based health information system
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/14052