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Applying the XForms Standard to Public Health Case Reporting and Alerting
Author(s) -
Rebecca Hills,
Janet Baseman,
Debra Revere,
Craig Boge,
Mark W. Oberle,
Jason N. Doctor,
William B. Lober
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
online journal of public health informatics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1947-2579
DOI - 10.5210/ojphi.v3i2.3656
Subject(s) - health information exchange , public health , scripting language , health informatics , public health informatics , notifiable disease , variety (cybernetics) , xml , health care , internet privacy , computer science , medicine , public health surveillance , world wide web , hrhis , health information , health policy , nursing , artificial intelligence , economics , economic growth , operating system
Notifiable condition reporting and alerting are two important public health functions. Today, a variety of methods are used to transfer these types of information. The increasing use of electronic health record systems by healthcare providers makes new types of electronic communication possible. We used the XForms standard and nationally recognized technical profiles to demonstrate the communication of both notifiable condition reports and patient-tailored public health alerts. This demonstration of bi-directional communication took placein a prototypical health information exchange environment. We successfully transferred information between provider electronic health record systems and public health systems for notifiable condition reporting. Patient-specific alerts were successfully sent from public health to provider systems. In this paper we discuss the benefits of XForms, including the use of XML, advanced form controls, form initialization and reduction in scripting. We also review implementation challenges, the maturity of the technology and its suitability for use in public health.

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