About Person Matching

Core Team

Scope

Overview

One of the most challenging aspects of interoperability is person matching, the ability to identify different records for the same person so that they can be linked to provide a more comprehensive and holistic view of that person. Accomplishing this critically important objective can be challenging across domains because they often use different systems, each with its own ways of identifying individuals. That means it can be difficult to know if Jon A. Smyth in one system/domain is the same person as Jonathan Alex Smyth in another (much less if the last name is misspelled “Smith” in one of them). Project Unify is tackling this challenge in order to lower a longtime hurdle to broad, efficient interoperability.

Phase 1 Summary: Conceptualizing Person Matching

Over the past year, Project Unify’s person matching core team, led by Pradeep Podila and Rita Torkzadeh explored this key enabler of interoperability. A conceptual model of an approach and its considerations were laid out for Project Unify, followed by a series of public education sessions to the National Interoperability Collaborative (NIC) community. This work is intended as the predicate for work in Phase 2, which will design and implement a proof of concept (PoC) demonstration that includes person matching to support the exchange of data on a given individual across domains. The intention of the POC is for it to be open source/open-API.

Phase 2: Demonstrate person-matching proof-of-concept

The goal of this PoC is to leverage other aspects of Project Unify (such as Unify UX) and to harness the data available in the MiHIN Interoperability Land repository. Using this repository and its FHIR resources will provide the opportunity to align the PoC with user stories the group is developing. MiHIN is also working on tools that will make it easier to generate new personas that match our user stories. A company called Senzing, which has expertise in person matching, is helping to develop the PoC in a way that avoids vendor lock-in. We intend to focus our efforts on defining an API that will have the potential to be freely implemented. The PoC itself is a collaborative project, with input from many members of the Let’s Get Technical community. Our first rough draft will be published on the NIC Collaboration Hub in August 2020, with the goal of producing a very early working PoC application in September.

Some Thoughts on ONC Patient Identity and Patient Matching Workshop

Yesterday, June 1, 2020 the ONC held a working session on patient identity and patient matching. I was able to attend along with some other Project Unify group members and here are my takeaways along with some takeaways/thoughts/comments from other members:While I missed some presentations due to other work, many of the ONC Patient Identification and Matching workshop presentations seemed to be either (mostly) “Yay!” Universal Patient Identifier (UPI) cheerleaders (and specific proposals for…

Read more…
0 Replies
Views: 2769

USCDI v1 Summary of Data Classes and Data Elements

Last year the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) published its first version of the U.S. Core Data for Interoperability (USCDI), which defines "data classes" and elements for exchange in healthcare. Primarily focused on clinical information it also includes demographics relevant to matching. Below are the elements USCDI v1 lists for the patient demographics data class: First NameLast NamePrevious NameMiddle Name (including middle initial)SuffixBirth…

Read more…
0 Replies
Views: 3260