The Commission adopted on 16 July 2007 its Draft Recommendation on eHealth Interoperability and submitted it to informal public consultation. The final Recommendation is expected to be adopted later in 2007 and is set to contribute to the achievement of "a European health information space" by the end of the year 2015.
The draft outlines a set of recommended guidelines for good practice on eHealth interoperability and proposes a number of actions addressed to member states, industries and associations that work in the eHealth field. According to the Commission, the Recommendation has relevance also for the European Economic Area (EEA) countries.
The draft proposes actions:
- at political and legal level - such as building a political platform to set up the necessary legal and regulatory environment for eHealth interoperability. This could involve more effective coordination and harmonisation of national legislations and would address a number of initiatives in relation to privacy and confidentiality issues;
- on creating the organisational framework or process and interfaces, in and through which national eHealth infrastructures and services can interact;
- on applications - to agree, for example, on standards for semantic interoperability;
- on architectural and technical interoperability - to establish common communication platforms, which, for example, would address security-related issues and agree on a single certification and accreditation process, and;
- on monitoring and evaluation.
According to the Commission, the ultimate goal of the Recommendation is "to contribute to enabling the provision of a means for authorised healthcare professionals to gain managed access to essential health information about patients [such as the appropriate parts of a patient's electronic health record, patient summary and emergency data], subject to the patient's consent, and with full regard for data protection and security requirements" across Europe.




