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Selection of Articles, Opinions, Discussions and News on Healthcare in India from all over the web covering Healthcare Policy, Healthcare Reform, News, Events, #HealthIT , Edipdemics, Chronic Diseases, #mHealth, #hcsmin ,
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An overview of NDHM's Technology

An overview of NDHM's Technology | Healthcare in India | Scoop.it

NDHM Architecture

NDHM is employing a federated architecture for its ecosystem. That means that management and data access occurs in a federated manner where different entities or systems will manage the health data.
There is no central data storage controlling and storing data.

Using the Federated Health Records Framework (FHR), patients can access and view their health records, and provide consent to any HIPs and HIUs to access their data.

To ensure smooth consented data sharing and time-bound data access, it is necessary to make the data traceable and auditable. Therefore the FHR Framework architecture leverages MeitY's Data Empowerment and Protection Architecture (DEPA) electronic consent framework, which is already being used in the financial sector.

Here are some interesting technical features of the NDHM ecosystem

FHIR for all Medical Data

Asynchronous APIs

Patient Privacy & Security Features of NDHM

- HIPs can only create data if authorized by the Patient:

- An HIU(Health Information User) can only get past health records of other HIPs if consented by Patient

- Peer to Peer Data Transfer Between HIP & HIU

 

Final Thoughts

It is one thing to have a concept and another thing to implement and execute it. So far NDHM seems to be going in the right direction. And there is hope that it will continue to do so.


Technology is being given equal importance to gain the trust of all players involved in this industry.

 

Privacy and Security have been a prime priority in the project as you can see from the above article, this is an oft-ignored aspect in old projects. Hope it continues to stay this way.

 

read the whole article at http://technology4doctors.blogspot.com/2021/05/an-overview-of-ndhms-technology.html

 

 

 

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Why is India Facing a 2nd Wave of the Corona Virus

Why is India Facing a 2nd Wave of the Corona Virus | Healthcare in India | Scoop.it

we as a country seem to have performed the hara-kiri that our cricket teams of the '80s and 90's were well known for. Before we had won the match, we started celebrating the victory, and seem to have lost the game. We didn't wait till Covid was completely under control. We started dismantling the specially created Covid Centers. We took our families to the malls and did not care about spraying sanitizers, before and after each interaction with something from outside our controlled environment. We started unmasking at will within our buildings and even at the Kirana stores. We started flying and driving around the country without masks and frolicking on the beaches of Goa. Our house parties were back on, and we destroyed the controlled zone that all India had worked so hard to become over a whole year. All, in less than a couple of months. And so it's back, worse than ever before, crippling our economy, our spirit, and making us feel bleak about the future. Except for this time, it doesn't look like everyone wants to tackle it together anymore.

 

The center and the states don't seem to get along. The media is pushing up the pitch and the amplitude of the hyperbole. Strangely, vaccines seem to be running out. People are still not masking up. Many are demonstrating utter and complete stupidity with regards to bending the rules. Construction sites are working in full sway as if there is no covid in this world. Watchmen in buildings aren't sure if they should let delivery in or collect them at the gate, so they do nothing. And the poor Kirana-wala is feeling weird about asking the people coming to his shop to mask up again. My neighboring Kirana-wala told me he is not done arguing with customers who are say "khaasi pehle nahin hui kya" (Translates to "Haven't you had a cold before?") Sounds like March 2020 again!

 

We both decided to formally put down our reasons for what has brought us to this stage. Policymakers must not let this happen again

1. The single biggest factor for the wave having arrived is how we have behaved in the recent past. 

2. Mutating Strains: Not under control

3. The Vaccine rollout: Lessons to learn

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