Abstract
Multilevel modeling has been proven in software as a viable solution for semantic interoperability, without imposing any specific programming languages or persistence models. The Multilevel Healthcare Information Modeling (MLHIM) specifications have adopted the XML Schema Definition 1.1 as the basis for its reference implementation, since XML technologies are consistent across all platforms and operating systems, with tools available for all mainstream programming languages. In MLHIM, the healthcare knowledge representation is defined by the Domain Model, expressed as Concept Constraint Definitions (CCDs), which provide the semantic interpretation of the objects persisted according to the generic Reference Model classes. This paper reports the implementation of the MLHIM Reference Model in XML Schema Definition language version 1.1 as well as a set of examples of CCDs generated from the National Cancer Institute – Common Data Elements (NCI CDE) repository. The set of CCDs was the base for the simulation of semantically coherent data instances, according to independent XML validators, persisted on an eXistDB database. This paper shows the feasibility of adopting XML technologies for the achievement of semantic interoperability in real healthcare scenarios, by providing application developers with a significant amount of industry experience and a wide array of tools through XML technologies.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
ACMI, electronic medical records, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t-aiKlIc6uk (last accessed: April 1, 2013)
De Leon, S., Connelly-Flores, A., Mostashari, F., Shih, S.C.: The business end of health information technology. Can a fully integrated electronic health record increase provider productivity in a large community practice? J. Med. Pract. Manage 25, 342–349 (2010)
Javitt, J.C.: How to succeed in health information technology. Health Aff. (Millwood) (2004); Suppl. Web Exclusives:W4-321-4
U.S. National Library of Medicine. 2011AA SNOMED CT Source Information, http://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/umls/sourcereleasedocs/current/SNOMEDCT (last accessed: April 28, 2013)
Maojo, V., Kulikowski, C.: Medical informatics and bioinformatics: integration or evolution through scientific crises? Methods Inf. Med. 45, 474–482 (2006)
Fitzmaurice, J.M., Adams, K., Eisenberg, J.: Three decades of research on computer applications in health care: medical informatics support at the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. J. Am. Med. Inform. Assoc. 9, 144–160 (2002)
Preker, A., Harding, A.: The economics of hospital reform from hierarchical to market-based incentives. World Hosp. Health Serv. 39, 3–10 (2003)
Harris, N.M., Thorpe, R., Dickinson, H., Rorison, F., Barrett, C., Williams, C.: Hospital and after: experience of patients and carers in rural and remote North Queensland, Australia. Rural Remote Health 4, 246 (2004)
Zusman, E.: Form facilitates function: innovations in architecture and design drive quality and efficiency in healthcare. Neurosurgery 66, N24 (2010)
Ward, M.M., Vartak, S., Schwichtenberg, T., Wakefield, D.: Nurses’ perceptions of how clinical information system implementation affects workflow and patient care. Comput. Inform. Nurs. 29, 502–511 (2011)
Jung, M., Choi, M.: A mechanism of institutional isomorphism in referral networks among hospitals in Seoul, South Korea. Health Care Manag (Frederick) 29, 133–146 (2010)
Hoangmai, H.P., O’Malley, A.S., Bach, P.B., Saiontz-Martinez, C., Schrag, D.: Primary care physicians’ links to other physicians through medicare patients: the scope of care coordination. Ann. Intern. Med. 150, 236–242 (2009)
Sittig, D.F., Singh, H.: A new sociotechnical model for studying health information technology in complex adaptive healthcare systems. QualSaf Health Care (suppl. 3), i68–i74 (2010)
Hyman, W.: When medical devices talk to each other: the promise and challenges of interoperability. Biomed. Instrum. Technol. (suppl.), 28–31 (2010)
Charters, K.: Home telehealth electronic health information lessons learned. Stud. Health Technol. Inform. 146, 719 (2009)
Raths, D.: Shifting away from silos. The interoperability challenges that hospitals face pale in comparison to the headaches plaguing State Departments. Healthc Inform. 27, 32–33 (2010)
Achimugu, P., Soriyan, A., Oluwagbemi, O., Ajayi, A.: Record linkage system in a complex relational database: MINPHIS example. Stud. Health Technol. Inform. 160, 1127–1130 (2010)
Metaxiotis, K., Ptochos, D., Psarras, J.: E-health in the new millennium: a research and practice agenda. Int. J. Electron. Healthc 1, 165–175 (2004)
Hufnagel, S.P.: Interoperability. Mil. Med. 174, 43–50 (2009)
Kadry, B., Sanderson, I.C., Macario, A.: Challenges that limit meaningful use of health information technology. Curr. Opin. Anaesthesiol. 23, 184–192 (2010)
Blobel, B., Pharow, P.: Analysis and evaluation of EHR approaches. Stud. Health Technol. Inform. 136, 359–364 (2008)
Rodrigues, J.M., Kumar, A., Bousquet, C., Trombert, B.: Using the CEN/ISO standard for categorial structure to harmonise the development of WHO international terminologies. Stud. Health Technol. Inform. 159, 255–259 (2009)
Blobel, B.: Ontologies, knowledge representation, artificial intelligence: hype or prerequisites for international pHealth interoperability? Stud. Health Technol. Inform. 165, 11–20 (2011)
National Health Service Media Centre. Dismantling the NHS national programme for IT, http://mediacentre.dh.gov.uk/2011/09/22/dismantling-the-nhs-national-programme-for-it (last accessed: May 15, 2013)
Lohrs, S.: Google to end health records service after it fails to attract users. The New York Times (June 24, 2011), http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/25/technology/25health.html?_r=3&. (last accessed: April 28, 2013)
Kalra, D., Beale, T., Heard, S.: The open EHR Foundation. Stud. Health Technol. Inform. 115, 153–173 (2005)
Martinez-Costa, C., Menarguez-Tortosa, M., Fernandez-Breis, J.T.: Towards ISO 13606 and open EHR archetype-based semantic interoperability. Stud. Health Technol. Inform. 150, 260–264 (2009)
Cavalini, L.T., Cook, T.W.: Health informatics: The relevance of open source and multilevel modeling. In: Hissam, S.A., Russo, B., de Mendonça Neto, M.G., Kon, F. (eds.) OSS 2011. IFIP AICT, vol. 365, pp. 338–347. Springer, Heidelberg (2011)
Dias, R.D., Cook, T.W., Freire, S.: Modeling healthcare authorization and claim submissions using the openEHR dual-model approach. BMC Med. Inform. Decis. Mak. 11, 60 (2011)
Kashfi, H., Torgersson, O.: A migration to an open EHR-based clinical application. Stud. Health Technol. Inform. 150, 152–156 (2009)
Eichelberg, M., Aden, T., Riesmeier, J., Dogac, A., Laleci, G.: A survey and analysis of electronic healthcare record standards. ACM Comput. Surv. 37, 277–315 (2005)
Yu, S., Berry, D., Bisbal, J.: Clinical coverage of an archetype repository over SNOMED-CT. J. Biomed. Inform. 45, 408–418 (2012)
Menezes, A.L., Cirilo, C.E., Moraes, J.L.C., Souza, W.L., Prado, A.: Using archetypes and domain specific languages on development of ubiquitous applications to pervasive healthcare. In: Proc. IEEE 23rd Int. Symp. Comput. Bas. Med. Syst., pp. 395–400 (2010)
Cavalini, L.T., Cook, T.: Knowledge engineering of healthcare applications based on minimalist multilevel models. In: IEEE 14th Int. Conf. e-Health Networ. Appl. Serv., pp. 431–434 (2012)
Sanderson, D.: Loss of data semantics in syntax directed translation. PhD Thesis in Computer Sciences. Renesselaer Polytechnic Institute, New York (1994)
Cook, T.W., Cavalini, L.: Implementing a specification for exceptional data in multilevel modeling of healthcare applications. ACM Sighit Rec. 2, 11 (2012)
Lee, T., Hon, C.T., Cheung, D.X.: Schema design and management for e-government data interoperability. Electr. Je.-Gov., 381–391 (2009)
Daconta, M.C., Obrst, L.J., Smith, K.T.: The Semantic Web. Wiley, Indianapolis (2003)
Rutle, A., MacCaull, W., Wang, H.: A metamodelling approach to behaviouralmodeling. In: Proc. 4th Worksh. Behav. Mod. Foundat. Appl., vol. 5 (2012)
Seligman, L., Roenthal, A.: XML’s impact on databases and data sharing. Computer, 59–67 (2001)
Fenton, S., Giannangelo, K., Kallem, C., Scichilone, R.: Data standards, data quality, and interoperability. J. Ahima (2007); extended online edition
Hitzler, P., Krötzsch, M., Parsia, B., Patel-Schneider, P.F., Rudolph, S.: OWL 2 Web Ontology Language Primer, 2 edn., http://www.w3.org/TR/owl2-primer/#Modeling_Knowledge:_Basic_Notions (last accessed: October 17, 2013)
Manola, F., Miller, E.: RDF Primer, http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-primer/#dublincore (last accessed: October 17, 2013)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2014 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this paper
Cite this paper
Cavalini, L.T., Cook, T.W. (2014). Use of XML Schema Definition for the Development of Semantically Interoperable Healthcare Applications. In: Gibbons, J., MacCaull, W. (eds) Foundations of Health Information Engineering and Systems. FHIES 2013. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 8315. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-53956-5_9
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-53956-5_9
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-642-53955-8
Online ISBN: 978-3-642-53956-5
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)