CA Core+ v1.1.0 DFT-preBallot
DFT-preBallot - The specification is a DFT-preBallot version of CA Core+ for collecting community feedback. For a full list of available versions, see the Directory of published versions
The CA Core+ Implementation Guide (IG) is a foundational specification aimed at advancing interoperability and standardizing data exchange across Canada’s healthcare ecosystem. This IG is informed by the ongoing development of the pan-Canadian Health Data Content Framework (pCHDCF), a collaborative initiative defining person-centric health data expectations for use, capture, and exchange at a pan-Canadian scale.
CA Core+ is a harmonization effort that integrates existing production pan-Canadian and jurisdictional product-specific specifications, ensuring a consistent and scalable interoperability framework. It is designed to provide reusable, high-quality, and standardized data structures that facilitate interoperability across healthcare systems and jurisdictions in Canada.
In this section:
The Relationship to PCHDCF section details how pCHDCF and CA Core+ interact.
To accelerate the development of this version of CA Core+ and its adoption, existing Canadian production specifications were referenced. A structured approach involving gap analysis and iterative profile development with jurisdictions was undertaken to establish an initial draft that can be leveraged and improved upon.
To ensure alignment between existing implementations and pan-Canadian priorities, a Gap Analysis was conducted to assess:
This analysis surfaced key areas for harmonization, including:
Rather than waiting for the finalization of pan-Canadian information models, CA Core+ is developed concurrently with pCHDCF LDM and CACDI to:
This approach fosters a bi-directional synchronization process, where:
This early draft release of CA Core+ (v1.0.0 DFT-preBallot) delivers a focused subset of reusable FHIR profiles and workflow modules grounded in the pan-Canadian Health Data Content Framework (pCHDCF) and aligned with the Logical Data Model (LDM) and the Canadian Core for Data Interoperability (CACDI) dataset.
The initial scope prioritizes foundational, person-centric health data and common patterns of data exchange that support broad reuse across jurisdictional and domain-specific implementation guides. Profiles included in this release were selected based on:
Note: While pCHDCF LDM and CACDI refer broadly to "person"-level concepts, this version of CA Core+ focuses on the FHIR Patient resource. A dedicated Person resource profile will be considered in future iterations for registry, EMR, and billing system applications.
More on versioning this guide can be found in Specification Guidance section, and the differences between versions can be reviewed in the Change Log.
CA Core+ is designed for use cases that require identifiable information.
This implementation guide includes identifying elements such as Patient.name
(which is required as 1..*
) to support clinical, administrative, and operational workflows where identifiable patient information is necessary.
Other resources such as Condition
, Observation
, and ServiceRequest
may also contain identifiable information.
Use cases involving anonymous reporting, de-identified datasets, or research workflows that do not require identity are considered out of scope for this guide.
Implementers supporting such use cases should refer to other profiles or guides designed for de-identified or pseudonymized data exchange, where Patient.name
, Practitioner.name
, and other identifying elements may be optional or excluded entirely.
The development and evolution of CA Core+ follows an integrated business process designed to align priorities, accelerate adoption, and ensure consistency across jurisdictions and stakeholders. This structured approach enables collaborative problem-solving and continuous improvement while ensuring that solutions meet both jurisdictional and pan-Canadian needs.
This approach ensures that CA Core+ remains a practical, scalable, and widely adopted standard. Key objectives include:
Collaboratively Align Federal-Provincial-Territorial (FPT) Priorities
Ensure interoperability efforts support pan-Canadian and jurisdictional health initiatives
Create Awareness and Foster Participation
Engage health IT vendors, jurisdictions, and the community to drive adoption
Promote a shared understanding of FHIR best practices in Canada
Deliver Consistent, High-Quality Solutions
Ensure that FHIR profiles and implementation guidance are consistent, reusable, and well-documented
Accelerate Adoption & Time-to-Market
Streamline the development lifecycle to enable faster deployment of CA Core+ solutions
Leverage existing production implementations to minimize rework and enhance scalability
Enhance Pan-Canadian Interoperability & Conformance
Establish a structured validation process to support adoption across jurisdictions and vendors
Provide guidance on implementation best practices and harmonization strategies
This guide provides an initial structure for surfacing and reviewing early versions of CA Core+ profiles in a way that supports community feedback and technical validation.
Specifically, the guide:
The profiles presented in this guide are early drafts and not yet finalized. Constraints may evolve in response to:
The guide will continue to expand and stabilize as the CA Core+ specification matures and prepares for future releases.
CA Core+ v1.0.0 DFT-preBallot is a draft version intended for:
Refinements will be driven by:
FHIR R4 is the first normative version of the FHIR standard and is widely adopted across health systems in Canada and internationally. By building on FHIR R4, CA Core+ ensures compatibility with existing production implementations while supporting alignment with pan-Canadian and international interoperability initiatives. The use of R4 also facilitates reuse of well-established patterns for resource profiling, terminology binding, and API design.
CA Core+ artifacts—including profiles, value sets, extensions, and capability statements—are all constructed using FHIR R4 as the foundational specification. Implementers are expected to use R4-conformant tooling and servers when working with this guide.
This engagement model is intended to support a bi-directional synchronization process: as feedback is collected on CA Core+ profiles, corresponding updates may be proposed for CACDI content—and vice versa. This approach supports long-term convergence between FHIR profiles and the broader pCHDCF while enabling flexible, incremental adoption in local contexts.
Ultimately, CA Core+ is not just a translation of CACDI into FHIR—it is a working draft of a shared foundation. Its development is guided by a principle of mutual adaptation where pan-Canadian guidance should reflect implementation realities, and implementations are able to reuse shared structures where feasible. If you have feedback about the specification visit the Specification Feedback page to learn about how you can contribute.