Open Health Manager™ is the reference implementation for the MITRE Health Manager Lab under the Living Health Lab initiative. This project aims to radically flip the locus of health data from organizations to individuals, promoting individual agency in personal health through primary self-care and engagement with their care team.
A core component needed to effect that flip and enable individual action is a health manager that serves as the repository for an individual's health data, collecting, combining, and making sense of health data as it is collected and making it available for the individual to share. The Health Manager lab is working with the HL7™ community to develop open standards for the collection, representation, and access of health data within a health manager. Open Health Manager™ is a reference implementation of these standards and a demonstration platform for what these standards and a patient-controlled health record can enable.
Open Health Manager™ implements the following FHIR IGs
- Patient Data Receipt (under development)
We love your input! We want to make contributing to this project as easy and transparent as possible, whether it's:
- Reporting a bug
- Discussing the current state of the code
- Submitting a fix
- Proposing new features
- Becoming a maintainer
We use GitHub to host code, to track issues and feature requests, as well as accept pull requests.
We Use GitHub Flow, So All Code Changes Happen Through Pull Requests
Pull requests are the best way to propose changes to the codebase. We actively welcome your pull requests:
- Fork the repo and create your branch from master.
- If you've added code that should be tested, add tests.
- If you've changed APIs, update the documentation.
- Ensure the test suite passes.
- Make sure your code lints.
- Issue that pull request!
In short, when you submit code changes, your submissions are understood to be under the same Apache 2 license that covers the project. Feel free to contact the maintainers if that's a concern.
We use GitHub issues to track public bugs. Report a bug by opening a new issue it's that easy!
Great Bug Reports tend to have:
- A quick summary and/or background
- Steps to reproduce
- Be specific!
- Give sample code if you can.
- What you expected would happen
- What actually happens
- Notes (possibly including why you think this might be happening, or stuff you tried that didn't work)
- People love thorough bug reports. I'm not even kidding.
Copyright 2022 The MITRE Corporation
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.