Clearly, the work of care teams needs to be simplified, but how? Currently, hospitals procure systems as whole bundles which may come with many useful features, but also include some that they actually don’t need. A more suitable option would be for them to only buy or develop the solutions they need. In the short run, this can be more expensive, but the long-term cost would be lower, and the application range would be far more suitable for a specific hospital’s needs. This is the essence of composable architecture – it allows healthcare organisations to design technology, organisation and partnership ecosystems, and business models in a modular manner, so that everything can be quickly adapted at any moment of need.
There are two important factors which make composable architecture work:
A composable architecture is built on top of a digital health platform (DHP). It includes data as a part of longitudinal health records, legacy data that is integrated into the platform, and even data collected by patients at home.
On top of the platform, there is a layer that holds applications, algorithms, and workflows. Some of these are pre-existing, and new ones can be added later. Additionally, through the APIs exposed by this layer, and by using low-code tools, hospitals can now design, build, and assemble personalised experiences to provide integrated care. This composable architecture is suitable for an acute or mental-health community healthcare organisation, an integrated care system, or a government platform.
If you would like to learn more about composable architecture in healthcare, you can watch a recording of Tomaž Gornik, Better’s CEO and Co-Chair of openEHR International, at the openEHR 2020 Digital Event: DATA FOR LIFE. His presentation, Composable Applications Based on Vendor-Neutral Data Persistence, is a part of the session titled How Industry Supports New Models of Healthcare, and it also featured:
1: How Doctors Feel About Electronic Health Records: National Physician Poll by The Harris Poll, accessed 28 January 2021 at: https://med.stanford.edu/content/dam/sm/ehr/documents/EHR-Poll-Presentation.pdf
2: Robert Wachter and Jeff Goldsmith: To Combat Physician Burnout and Improve Care, Fix the Electronic Health Record, accessed 28 January 2021 at: https://hbr.org/2018/03/to-combat-physician-burnout-and-improve-care-fix-the-electronic-health-record