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Meeting of Major Healthcare IT Standards Groups Sets New Initiative in Motion.


Business Editors/High-Tech Writers

NEEDHAM, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 26, 2004

The Object Management Group(TM) (OMG (1) See Object Management Group.

(2) "Oh my God!" See digispeak.

OMG - Object Management Group
(TM)) announces a new initiative amongst members of OMG, HL7, NCPDP NCPDP National Council for Prescription Drug Programs , X12 and representatives from MedicAlert Foundation, Express Scripts and PatientKeeper, after the groups came together for a meeting last month in St. Louis that examined the role of modeling and interoperability in the healthcare industry. The new initiative, "Exploring Interoperability Requirements in Healthcare," will resume at a meeting to establish a working roadmap for future standards as well as a re-launch of OMG's Healthcare Domain Task Force on Thursday, June 24, 2004 in Orlando, FL.

At this time, healthcare IT companies who are concerned with the importance of interoperability requirements, are urged to get in on the ground floor of this remarkable opportunity for involvement. To participate in the launch of this initiative, an email list has been made public: healthcare@omg.org. To add a name, contact, referral or customer, send the request to OMG Vice President of Business Development, Nicole Glazen Rikkinen at nicole@omg.org.

At the meeting in St. Louis, each standards body and end-user community representative had the opportunity to voice their approaches to healthcare interoperability and pertinent areas that demand standardization. Key discussions focused on electronic healthcare standards, electronic drug prescribing, patient record infrastructure, OMG Model Driven Architecture(R) (MDA (1) (Monochrome Display Adapter) The first IBM PC monochrome video display standard for text. Due to its lack of graphics, MDA cards were often replaced with Hercules cards, which provided both text and graphics. See PC display modes and Hercules Graphics. (R)) and its potential role in healthcare standardization, as well as business perspectives and standardization in the global market. For a complete summary of the meeting presentations, visit http://www.omg.org/news/meetings/tc/special_events.htm.

"MedicAlert is very encouraged by the outcome and direction of the St. Louis session. We had a productive exchange about the key issues that surround the question of what exactly is a Patient-Centered Electronic Health Record," said David Harrington, CTO of the MedicAlert(R) Foundation. "While there are many views and many different requirements, the common understanding that is emerging holds that the EHR contains information provided primarily from many health-related encounters, and that the connectivity engine is the central concept of any solution. It also includes the ability for all participating entities to identify and authenticate appropriate requests for information, and ensures that existing departmental and other legacy systems do not have to be replaced. Most importantly this process recognizes that essential to the successful implementation and deployment of any solution, is a well-defined set of services and interfaces for interoperability between these systems. We look forward to the continuation of these working sessions in June at the OMG Technical Meeting in Orlando."

Richard Soley, OMG Chairman and CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  added that, "Participation by all healthcare IT standards groups is key to moving forward with this exciting initiative. For instance, it is HL7's leadership in defining a Reference Model for healthcare, leveraging OMG's established Unified Modeling Language See UML.

(language) Unified Modeling Language - (UML) A non-proprietary, third generation modelling language. The Unified Modeling Language is an open method used to specify, visualise, construct and document the artifacts of an object-oriented software-intensive system
(TM) and ensuring suitability for implementation on any platform that will help drive a much needed standardized approach to Electronic Health Records."

Background

Past work through OMG's Healthcare Domain Task Force resulted in the adoption of four specifications between 1996 and 2001. The four specifications are: The Person Identification Service (PIDS PIDS Philippine Institute for Development Studies
PIDS Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society
PIDS Perimeter Intrusion Detection System
PIDS Person Identification Service
PIDS Polarization Intensity Differential Scattering
PIDS Prime Item Development Specification
), which defines a set of interfaces to an interchangeable set of services that provide a best match or ordered list of best matches to possibly incomplete or conflicting data about a person. The Resource Access Decision (RAD) Facility, which provides fine-grained access decisions to security-aware data and applications, and administration for the policies that define the decisions. The Clinical Observations Access Service (COAS COAS College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences (Oregon State University)
COAS Chief of Army Staff
COAs Children of Alcoholics
COAS Cooperadora de Acción Social (Argentina)
COAS Crew Optical Alignment Sight
), which standardizes access to clinical observations in multiple formats including numerical data stored by instruments or entered from observation; images; and transcribed notes. The Lexicon Query Service (LQS), which standardizes a set of read-only interfaces able to access medical terminology system definitions ranging from sets of codes to complex, hierarchical classification and categorization schemes.

About The OMG

With well-established standards covering software from design and development, through deployment and maintenance, and extending to evolution to future platforms, the Object Management Group (OMG) supports a full-lifecycle approach to enterprise integration which maximizes ROI (Return On Investment) The monetary benefits derived from having spent money on developing or revising a system. In the IT world, there are more ways to compute ROI than Carter has liver pills (and for those of you who never heard of that expression, it means a lot). , the key to successful IT. OMG's standards cover multiple operating systems, programming languages, middleware and networking infrastructures, and software development environments. OMG's Modeling standards, the basis for the MDA, include the Unified Modeling Language (UML) and Common Warehouse Metamodel For other uses of "CWM", see CWM (disambiguation).
The Common Warehouse Metamodel (CWM) is a specification for modeling metadata for relational, non-relational, multi-dimensional, and most other objects found in a data warehousing environment.
 (CWM). CORBA (Common Object Request Broker Architecture) A software-based interface from the Object Management Group (OMG) that allows software modules (objects) to communicate with each other no matter where they are located on a private network or the global , the Common Object Request Broker Architecture (standard, programming) Common Object Request Broker Architecture - (CORBA) An Object Management Group specification which provides a standard messaging interface between distributed objects.

The original CORBA specification (1.
, is OMG's standard open platform with hundreds of millions of deployments running today.

Headquartered in Needham, MA, USA, with a U.S. government representative in Washington, DC, and international marketing representatives in Japan, the UK, and Germany, the Object Management Group is an international, open membership, not-for-profit computer industry specifications consortium. OMG member companies write, adopt, and maintain the organization's standards following a mature, open process. All current OMG specifications may be downloaded without charge from the organization's website, www.omg.org; the site also provides additional information about OMG and its activities. For information on joining the OMG, or questions not addressed on the website, please contact OMG headquarters by email at info@omg.org, by phone at +1-781-444 0404, or by fax at +1-781-444 0320.

Note to editors: The OMG Object Management Group Logo(R), MDA(R), Model Driven Architecture(R), UML(R), CORBA(R), CORBA Academy(R), The Information Brokerage(R), XMI (1) (XML Metadata Interchange) An XML-based representation of a UML model. XMI is used to transfer UML diagrams between various modeling tools. See UML.

(2) An earlier high-speed bus from Digital that was used in large VAX machines.
(R) and IIOP (Internet Inter-ORB Protocol) The CORBA message protocol used on a TCP/IP network (Internet, intranet, etc.). CORBA is the industry standard for distributed objects, which allows programs (objects) to be run remotely in a network. (R) are registered trademarks of the Object Management Group. OMG(TM), Object Management Group(TM), CORBA logos(TM), Model Driven Development(TM), MDD MDD Major depressive disorder, see there (TM), OMG Interface Definition Language See IDL.

Interface Definition Language - (IDL) 1. An OSF standard for defining RPC stubs.

2. Part of an effort by Project DOE at SunSoft, Inc. to integrate distributed object technology into the Solaris operating system.
 (IDL (1) (Interface Definition Language) A language used to describe the interface to a routine or function. For example, objects in the CORBA distributed object environment are defined by an IDL, which describes the services performed by the object and how the data )(TM), The Architecture of Choice for a Changing World(TM), CORBAservices(TM), CORBAfacilities(TM), CORBAmed(TM), CORBAnet(TM), Integrate 2004(TM), Middleware That's Everywhere(TM), Unified Modeling Language(TM), The UML Cube logo(TM), MOF(TM), CWM(TM), The CWM Logo(TM), Model Driven Architecture Logos(TM) and the XMI Logo(TM) are trademarks of the Object Management Group. All other products or company names mentioned are used for identification purposes only, and may be trademarks of their respective owners.
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Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Business Wire
Date:May 26, 2004
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