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PD ISO/TR 14292:2012

Current

Current

The latest, up-to-date edition.

Health informatics. Personal health records. Definition, scope and context

Available format(s)

Hardcopy , PDF

Language(s)

English

Published date

30-04-2012

£198.00
Excluding VAT

Foreword
Introduction
1 Scope
2 Terms and definitions
3 Abbreviations
4 Definition of a PHR
5 Scope of the PHR
6 Context of the PHR
Annex A (informative) - Published definitions of the PHR
Annex B (informative) - Relationship of this Technical
        Report to the HL7 PHR System Functional Model
Bibliography

Describes a personal health record (PHR). It also describes the kinds of records that should be called PHRs, in recognition of the lack of consistency in how this term is presently used.

Committee
IST/35
DocumentType
Standard
Pages
32
PublisherName
British Standards Institution
Status
Current

This Technical Report defines a personal health record (PHR). This definition is intended to help clarify the kinds of records that should be called PHRs, in recognition of the lack of consistency in how this term is presently used. This Technical Report considers the PHR from the perspective of the personal information contained within it and the core services needed to manage this information.

A PHR is not a singular entity; the concept encompasses a spectrum of possible information repositories and services that meet different purposes consistent with the definition. This Technical Report therefore also discusses the scope of the PHR in terms of this spectrum as a series of dimensions by which a PHR may be classified and equivalent PHR products compared. It also includes one dimension to classify the kinds of collaborative care PHRs provided by healthcare organizations.

This Technical Report also considers the wider context of engagement of individuals in the management of their own health and healthcare, since this engagement is the primary driver for present-day growth of PHR systems and services internationally.

This Technical Report includes:

  • a definition of a PHR;

  • a pragmatic multidimensional classification of PHRs;

  • an overview of the possible ways in which the inclusion and engagement of individuals in managing their health and healthcare impacts on the potential roles of the PHR, including scenarios for collaborative care between individuals and healthcare organizations.

The many kinds of end-user application that might be implemented and used to deliver PHR system functionality are outside the scope of this Technical Report.

Standards Relationship
ISO/TR 14292:2012 Identical

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PD ISO/TR 14639-2:2014 Health informatics. Capacity-based eHealth architecture roadmap Architectural components and maturity model

ISO/TS 22600-1:2006 Health informatics Privilege management and access control Part 1: Overview and policy management
ISO 18308:2011 Health informatics — Requirements for an electronic health record architecture
ISO/IEC 2382-17:1999 Information technology Vocabulary Part 17: Databases
ISO 1087-1:2000 Terminology work Vocabulary Part 1: Theory and application
ISO 13606-1:2008 Health informatics Electronic health record communication Part 1: Reference model
EN 13940-1:2007 Health informatics - System of concepts to support continuity of care - Part 1: Basic concepts
ISO/IEC 6523-1:1998 Information technology — Structure for the identification of organizations and organization parts — Part 1: Identification of organization identification schemes
ISO 7498-2:1989 Information processing systems Open Systems Interconnection Basic Reference Model Part 2: Security Architecture
ISO/IEC 2382-8:1998 Information technology Vocabulary Part 8: Security
ISO/TS 13606-4:2009 Health informatics Electronic health record communication Part 4: Security
ISO/IEC 15414:2015 Information technology Open distributed processing Reference model Enterprise language

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