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FHIR Isn’t Enough: The Missing Layers Needed for True Longitudinal Records

Why FHIR Alone Cannot Deliver Interoperability

Healthcare leaders often assume that adopting FHIR APIs will unify their systems. But FHIR only solves transport, not meaning, identity, or continuity. True interoperability requires more than endpoints.

FHIR resources vary by vendor. Fields may be missing or coded differently. Identity mismatches break continuity. And most important, FHIR does not impose workflow, context, or data quality standards.

Common Gaps When Organizations Rely Only on FHIR

1. Inconsistent Implementation

Vendors choose which fields to support. This creates structural mismatches.

2. Missing or Partial Data Elements

Some systems send only minimal clinical or administrative fields.

3. Semantic Differences

The same clinical concept may be coded differently across systems.

4. Identity Fragmentation

Patient IDs differ across networks, breaking the record.

5. Limited Historical Depth

FHIR often exposes snapshots rather than complete histories.

Layers Required Beyond FHIR

1. Identity Resolution

Match patients across EHRs, labs, claims, and portals.

2. Terminology Mapping

Normalize LOINC, SNOMED, ICD, and CPT codes.

3. Data Normalization

Resolve duplicates, combine events, and standardize timestamps.

4. Governance

Establish rules for access, lineage, quality, and retention.

5. Context-Aware Enrichment

Add meaning through sequencing and clinical context.

These layers convert FHIR from a transport mechanism into part of a unified architecture.

Read the full whitepaper to understand the architecture behind real-time harmonization and longitudinal records.

Ratnadeep Bhattacharjee
Chief Solutions Officer, TechVariable
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