Results of the Patient Access Track
Wallets
See the results of the wallets topic on a separate page.
Information and Tutorials
FHIR DevDays videos and presentations
- Introduction to SMART on FHIR (video, presentation)
- SMART on FHIR in real life and best practices (video, presentation)
- Enabling SMART on FHIR with Azure B2C (video, presentation)
- Let's Build! A Python SMART on FHIR app in action (video, presentation)
- SMART on FHIR mobile apps: Integrating Apple Health & health connect data into EHRs FHIR Servers (video, presentation)
- International Patient Summary: A FHIR patient summary (video)
- Patient Authored Documents using IPS (video, presentation)
- Hajj and FHIR (video)
- International Patient Access: Contribute to global interop (video, presentation)
- Implementing IPA on a country level (video, presentation)
- FHIR, patient access, and consent (video)
Note that these are just some of the related presentations and only from the latest edition of DevDays. There are many more available from previous years.
Open-source implementations
Useful tools and libraries for the track include:
- SMART on FHIR JavaScript Library fhirclient.
- There are some useful app examples on Apotti's GitHub repo.
- Another open-source example of SMART App Launch and communicating with Epic is client-js-examples, forked from the examples of the SMART on FHIR JavaScript Library.
- Live Patient Document Generator, a tool introduced by Grahame Grieve in the Patient Authored Documents using IPS presentation listed above.
City of Helsinki Challenge
The City of Helsinki Challenge, looking for patient-facing apps to be integrated with the Maisa patient portal, received 11 entries from diverse teams.
The awarded winners of the challenge are:
Brain informed
The application offers support for people recovering from a stroke. It uses other widely available care-supporting applications and does not try to do everything by itself. The app has a clear user group - people in rehabilitation and their family members - who can follow their rehabilitation program and record their progress. The app uses light gamification to motivate users, and these elements are also used creatively in progress tracking. The concept can be expanded to support the treatment of other illnesses as well.
Heybaberiba: My Baseline
The application supports long-term monitoring of illnesses. It allows users to track their wellbeing and helps follow how effective the treatment is for each person. The app combines information from the patient's medical record - such as changes in medication or other treatment methods - and shows how these changes affect the patient and the healthcare professional.
Otos
The application and its connected hearing test tools move much of the hearing assessment to the customer. It allows the user to take an eardrum photo and perform an audiometry test at a self-service point. These self-made tests reduce the workload for professionals. The solution uses both physical measurements and data transfer through Maisa to support the assessment process.
In addition, the jury awarded a honorary mention:
Sensotrend
Sensotrend's application improves self-care for people with diabetes and helps transfer monitoring data from the user's own measuring devices into one application. The app makes it possible to follow the illness more systematically.
The recording of the demo session can be found on the session recording.