Interoperability

Interoperability allows multiple systems, devices, applications or products to connect and communicate in a coordinated way, with no effort from the end user.

It is important to highlight the difference between interoperability and system integration. Both involve the transmission of data between different systems, the main difference being the way they communicate.

Interoperability is the real-time exchange of data between different systems that communicate directly in the same language (standard formats), instantly interpreting the received data and presenting it unchanged.

We can partition interoperability into 4 levels of importance, such as:

  • Foundational level: interconnectivity requirements to securely exchange data between systems
  • Structural level: definition of the format and organization of data exchange
  • Semantic level: standardized definitions from vocabularies to coding and datasets available to provide meaning and shared understanding to the user
  • Organizational level: legal, social, and organizational considerations

When it comes to data, your business must be ready to hit your targets, scale and communicate with key systems. Don't waste time contact Craftere. We'll make your data meaningful and help integrate it into the systems that matter to your business.

Our Goal

  • Compliance
  • Reduced costs
  • Reduced errors
  • Better data protection

The Challenge

The biggest challenge is in the analysis of the existing data and in its process of transformation, mapping and orchestration until reaching the standard formats.

Interoperability allows multiple systems, devices, applications or products to connect and communicate in a coordinated way, with no effort from the end user.

Industries

Healthcare

Standard data format most used

HL7 FHIR

Questions

Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources

What Is FHIR®? The HL7® FHIR® (Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources) standard defines how healthcare information can be exchanged between different computer systems regardless of how it is stored in those systems.

An enterprise service bus (ESB) is a software platform used to distribute work among connected components of an application . It is designed to provide a uniform means of moving work, offering applications the ability to connect to the ESB and subscribe to messages based on simple structural and business policy rules