NHS Booking and Referral Standard

Guide v1.8.0 | Core v1.1.4 | Package v1.33.0

BaRS FHIR Usage

BaRS uses FHIR to achieve interoperability between healthcare IT systems. This section explains how BaRS makes use of some key FHIR concepts which need to be understood by developers implementing the standard.



Frameworks

A mix of data exchange frameworks are employed by BaRS to support different workflows.



REST

FHIR is often associated with REST (REpresentational State Transfer) as a primary method of exchange. BaRS uses REST for many of the benefits it offers -

  • allows independent modular development of client and server APIs (they don't need to know about each other before exchanges)
  • easy to integrate because of common agreed standards
  • scalability in developing and performance

In BaRS, simple CRUD operations on single resources is used for discrete atomic functions, such as retrieving a known booking or referral entity.



FHIR Operations framework

Performing the required steps in workflow using simple CRUD operations on single resources can be complex and relies on prior knowledge or dictates explicit rules around workflow in any given system, for example: a patient must exist before a service request can be made. In order to support complex workflows that utilise composites of resources, simple CRUD operations on sinlge resources would breach some core principles of ReST (e.g. inabililty to maintain stateless communication for example). Therefore BaRS utilises the FHIR operations framework which:

  • offers a degree of autonomy to the receiver of the communication in how they process for their system
  • is designed to support events, triggering activity between systems, supporting the response workflow requirements identified by many of the BaRS use cases, for example: 999 to CAS Validation Request/Response.


$process-message

This specific FHIR operation enables the exchange of complex composites whilst maintaining the principles of REST. The $process-message endpoint will be called at various stages in any of the workflows outlined to fulfil requests such as:

  • 'create a booking'
  • 'process a referral for validation'
  • 'validation outcome response'

The endpoint receives only POST requests of bundle type 'message', with the required MessageHeader resource dictating how to process and what is deemed the 'focus' (key Resource) of the request. The sender packages up this content, POSTs to the receiver and lets them decide how to consume and process the bundle.

You must implement a $process-message endpoint to be compliant with BaRS because it is used for initial requests (booking, service request etc.) but also for responses (validation outcome response etc.).

Please see the Standard Patterns for generic guidance for processing messages.



Bundle

The use of the FHIR bundle in BaRS primarily supports the use of $process-message. It is also used as follows:

  • When $process-message is initiated, a sender packages up numerous FHIR resources (MessageHeader, Patient, ServiceRequest etc.), the bundle will include everything needed by a receiver to process the request being made.
  • The $process-message endpoint is capable of receiving different types of request. The sender indicates the the action required by specifying in the MessageHeader resource, for example: booking or servicerequest, the operation, whether it be 'new' or 'update' and central FHIR resource from which to make sense of the bundle, the 'focus'.
  • A bundle type of 'searchset' is also used in BaRS when a receiver responds to a senders request for available slots, in the booking workflow. A receiver responds by bundling FHIR resources (HealthcareService, Schedule, Slot(s) etc.) related to particular HealthcareService which a sender will unpack and process to display service availability to a user.


Journey ID

The Journey ID uses the episodeOfCare resource.

Each Encounter between systems can reference the same originating episodeOfCare, allowing grouping of all the Encounters to one flow.

The FHIR episodeOfCare resource would be created at the beginning of the patient journey when the Encounter is created and leads onto a ServiceRequest or other appropriate flow.

Encounter-episodeOfCare-screenshot

This snippet of coding shows the episodeOfCare within the Encounter referencing a GUID that will be used throughout the patients journey.

<episodeOfCare>
    <!--      Resource reference to an EpisodeOfCare Journey ID      -->
    <reference value="d877b820-e72b-44d1-a627-195f54bfc606" />
</episodeOfCare>



LastUpdatedDate

Every resource will include a lastUpdated date in the meta tag. This is to be used for tracking and updating.

<meta>
    <versionId value="1.0.0-alpha" />
    <lastUpdated value="2021-11-26T15:00:00+00:00" />
    <profile value="https://fhir.nhs.uk/StructureDefinition/BARSBundleMessage" />
</meta>



How to handle times

  • All times MUST be in FHIR Instant format (YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss.sssssss+zz:zz)
    • e.g. Year-Month-DayTHours:Minutes:Seconds.milliseconds+OffsetFromUTC
    • e.g. 2015-02-07T13:28:17.2398742+02:00
    • except where specifically defined otherwise
  • All times can have up to seven digits resolution for milliseconds
  • All times SHOULD be converted to UTC from local times (if not stored locally in UTC) before being included in any messages, this means the offset should be zero
  • When receiving a time in a message a system MUST expect and handle a non UTC time (e.g. with a non-zero offset)
    • Therefore if a time is received that is not UTC, the receiver should convert the time back to UTC using the offset given (or to their local time, if storing times in a local time)
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