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C3-PRO: Connecting ResearchKit to the Health System Using i2b2 and FHIR

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2016

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Public Library of Science
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Pfiffner, Pascal B., Isaac Pinyol, Marc D. Natter, and Kenneth D. Mandl. 2016. “C3-PRO: Connecting ResearchKit to the Health System Using i2b2 and FHIR.” PLoS ONE 11 (3): e0152722. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0152722. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152722.

Abstract

A renewed interest by consumer information technology giants in the healthcare domain is focused on transforming smartphones into personal health data storage devices. With the introduction of the open source ResearchKit, Apple provides a framework for researchers to inform and consent research subjects, and to readily collect personal health data and patient reported outcomes (PRO) from distributed populations. However, being research backend agnostic, ResearchKit does not provide data transmission facilities, leaving research apps disconnected from the health system. Personal health data and PROs are of the most value when presented in context along with health system data. Our aim was to build a toolchain that allows easy and secure integration of personal health and PRO data into an open source platform widely adopted across 140 academic medical centers. We present C3-PRO: the Consent, Contact, and Community framework for Patient Reported Outcomes. This open source toolchain connects, in a standards-compliant fashion, any ResearchKit app to the widely-used clinical research infrastructure Informatics for Integrating Biology and the Bedside (i2b2). C3-PRO leverages the emerging health data standard Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR).

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Medicine and Health Sciences, Health Care, Health Services Research, Computer and Information Sciences, Cryptography, Physical Sciences, Mathematics, Engineering and Technology, Equipment, Cell Phones, Medicine and health sciences, Infectious diseases, Viral diseases, Hepatitis, Hepatitis C, Gastroenterology and hepatology, Liver diseases, Infectious hepatitis, Electronics, Consumer Electronics, Pharmacology, Drug Interactions, Computer Software, Open Source Software, Science Policy, Open Science

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