Foreword
1 Scope
2 References
3 Terms and definitions
4 Abbreviated terms
5 Trust constituency
6 Principles and objectives
6.1 Ensured Trust
6.2 Trust constituency
6.3 Health record rights
6.4 Health record obligations
6.5 Health record compositions
6.6 Healthcare parties and their accountable actions
6.7 Healthcare agents and their accountable actions
6.8 Scope of accountability, unit of accountability
6.9 Authentication
6.10 Auditability
6.11 Chain of trust
6.12 Faithfulness, permanence, persistence and indelibility
6.13 Data definition, data registry
6.14 Data integrity
6.15 Completeness and continuity
7 Key characteristics
7.1 Identifiable information
7.2 Architectural basis
7.3 Master files
7.4 Master registries
7.5 Electronic records
7.6 Record chronology, continuity completeness
7.7 Authentication, non-repudiation services
7.8 Digital signature, Public key infrastructure
7.9 Audit
7.10 Permanence, persistence and indelibility
7.11 On-Line Transaction Processing (OLTP)
7.12 On-Line Analytical Processing (OLAP)
7.13 Fault tolerance
7.14 Data synchrony
7.15 Time synchrony
7.16 Trusted end-to-end information flows
7.17 Disclosure, Export
7.18 Prospective services
7.19 Work flow
7.20 Concurrent status, Records
7.21 Retrospective status, Records
7.22 Personal healthcare professional services
7.23 Data integrity
7.24 Protocols: Care plans, Critical paths
7.25 Problem lists
7.26 Decision support
7.27 Surveillance, Metrics and Analysis
7.28 Communications infrastructure
7.29 Multiple person linkage
7.30 Healthcare professional - Subject of care linkage
7.31 Localization, local authority
7.32 User environments
7.33 Version management
7.34 Inter-application interoperability
7.35 Change scale (Scalability)
7.36 Validation
8 Principles and objectives enabled by key characteristics
Annex A Exercise to validate the key characteristics set out
in this technical report
Annex B RM-ODP viewpoint
Annex C RM-ODP enterprise viewpoint
Annex D RC-ODP architecture - Enterprise language
Bibliography