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CTO Report -- Tooling HL7 Board Meeting

CTO Report -- Tooling HL7 Board Meeting. John Quinn Cambridge, Mass October 5, 2010. Tooling Report. Evolution of Tooling Processes State of Current Tooling Projects Opportunities for Collaboration Implications for ongoing support. Process Before Tooling. Current Tooling Process.

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CTO Report -- Tooling HL7 Board Meeting

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  1. CTO Report -- Tooling HL7 Board Meeting John Quinn Cambridge, Mass October 5, 2010

  2. Tooling Report • Evolution of Tooling Processes • State of Current Tooling Projects • Opportunities for Collaboration • Implications for ongoing support

  3. Process Before Tooling

  4. Current Tooling Process

  5. Future Tooling Process

  6. Interdependence Between Methodology and Tooling • Methodology and Reference Specifications are interdependent • Methodology and HL7 Meta-Model are interdependent • Tooling is dependent on Meta-Model • Feedback from implementers suggest changes to: • Core Artifacts – RIM, Datatypes, Vocabulary • Methodology • Alignment with other SDOs • All impact tooling

  7. Interdependencies

  8. Implications for Tooling Processes • Increased formality for change control of all interdependencies • Recognition that updates may be needed to previously balloted content to remain current • Synchronization of changes need to be formalized into releases – both developmental and production • Increased coordination and communication

  9. HL7 Tooling Solution Vision

  10. 2010 Tooling Projects • 2009 Projects focused on improved stability and quality measures of current tools and core reference artifacts. • 2010 Projects include: • V3 Publishing update to enable MIF 2.0 and streamline implementation • Updates to the Static Model Designer initially developed by the NHS as an Open Health Tools Project to incorporate changes needed to support full development cycle of Universal level artifacts as well as realm specific artifacts • 2011 will be impacted by balloting of methodology and Model Interchange Format (MIF) as current static model version is 2.1.6 and reconciliation changes are targeted to MIF 2.0

  11. Opportunities to Collaborate • Current project to implement the NHSW Static Model Designer has completed the first increment for testing with HL7 Tooling and V3 Publishing WGs • Canada Health Infoway is sponsoring a project to update and stabilize the V3 generator, incorporate Canadian enhancements and license as EPL • A new project to develop requirements for the Shared Artifact Repository was proposed at the October 1, 2010 OHT Board Meeting – co-sponsored by IHTSDO and OMG • Successful Pilot of another OHT Project – Model Driven Health Tools, sponsored by IBM & the VA designing CDA Templates and generating Implementation Guides but will need HL7 support to become an HL7 tool • Other projects supporting vocabulary management, conformance testing, example message generation, semantic mapping, code generation and others that support implementation are underway at OHT

  12. Shared Artifact Repository • Proposal to create a charter project to: • Assemble requirements from OHT members • Identify existing technology capabilities to support requirements • Preferably based on extensible open source architecture with significant community to continue to evolve • Co-sponsored by HL7, OMG and IHTSDO

  13. Value Proposition • Many OHT members require ability to register existence of and relationships among controlled artifacts • Artifacts are controlled components of interdependent technical environments and include (but are not limited to) • Models • Specification components • Vocabulary codes systems, concept domains and value sets • Source code • Software documentation components

  14. Value Proposition • HL7 alone has at least 8 types of artifacts that are managed through separate review processes, many with significant interdependencies • Various members can produce implementation and conformance specifications based on HL7 specifications and other specifications including from IHTSDO, W3C and OMG - including machine readable artifacts • Multiple types of artifacts required distinct registration support and may require different user authentication roles and processes • Pooling requirements and acquiring or developing robust registration and artifact management capabilities are needed to support collaborative ecosystem and demonstrate necessary component accountability • Design for change – manage for change; collectively

  15. Shared Artifact Repository Core Extras

  16. V3 Normative Specifications Every year there are more interdependent artifacts to manage

  17. Budget Implications for Tooling • Maintaining and Enhancing HL7 Tooling requires • Help desk support for technical support for installation and configuration and user support for appropriate use • Both commercially acquired tools and developed tools require ongoing maintenance support • Formal change management with release schedules and integration testing to ensure tools work together • Development of new tools requires collaboration with both other SDOs and potential tool users to align methodologies and increase interoperability • Coordination with other HL7 WGs to align methodology and tools, train and support users and support conversion of existing artifacts • Benefits of increased tooling can not be realized with proposed 2011 budget and we will enter a period of “maintenance” at best.

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