[align=center]
Fhir & Hl7 For Product Managers: Healthcare Interoperability
Published 3/2026
Created by HealthTechX Academy - Neel Majumder
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Level: Intermediate | Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 10 Lectures ( 2h 15m ) | Size: 1.7 GB[/center]
Lead EHR integrations and FHIR apps without technical background. Real artifacts, proven frameworks, instant results.
What you'll learn
✓ Create a complete Interface Design Document (IDD) for any healthcare integration project
✓ Choose the optimal interoperability approach (FHIR R4 vs HL7 v2 vs SMART on FHIR vs API vs batch file) for your specific use case
✓ Calculate the true Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) for healthcare integrations
✓ Lead implementation teams from requirements through go-live without writing code yourself
✓ Make evidence-based build vs buy vs automate decisions using structured frameworks
✓ Create go-live readiness checklists with specific functional, operational, and stakeholder approval criteria
✓ Address security, privacy, and HIPAA compliance requirements in integration design
Requirements
● No programming or coding experience required. No prior knowledge of FHIR, HL7, or healthcare interoperability needed Helpful but not required: Experience in healthcare, product management, or IT roles Microsoft Word, Google Docs, or similar word processor (to use artifact templates). Willingness to learn by creating real deliverables (this is a hands-on course)
Description
You've been handed a "simple" healthcare integration project. Connect the lab system to Epic. Build a SMART on FHIR app. "It should only take a few weeks."
Six months later, you're over budget, behind schedule, and drowning in technical jargon you don't understand. The interface team is speaking another language. Clinical stakeholders are frustrated. Your executive sponsor is asking uncomfortable questions about ROI. And you're wondering how a "simple" data exchange turned into a $200K nightmare.
This happens because nobody teaches healthcare interoperability for non-technical leaders.
THE REALITY CHECK
Here's what you won't find in this course
• Coding tutorials or developer bootcamps
• Deep technical implementation of FHIR APIs or HL7 parsers
• Certification exam prep (CAHIMS, CPHIMS, etc.)
• Clinical workflow optimization or EHR super-user training
• Promises of "mastering FHIR in 2 hours"
This is not a course for software engineers. If you want to write code, implement OAuth flows, or configure Mirth Connect routes-please look elsewhere.
WHAT THIS COURSE ACTUALLY IS
This is a product management and clinical informatics course for non-technical professionals who need to lead healthcare interoperability projects-not implement them.
You'll learn the frameworks, artifacts, and decision-making processes that PMs, analysts, and healthcare IT leaders use to
• Scope integrations that don't spiral into scope creep
• Choose FHIR vs HL7 vs API based on evidence, not vendor hype
• Lead implementation teams without understanding every technical detail
• Prevent interfaces from becoming technical debt 18 months post-launch
Taught by a Faculty of Health Informatics and Digital Health Product Leader with 15+ years leading real global implementations-from small clinics to multi-hospital health systems, from startup SMART apps to enterprise Epic integrations.
WHAT YOU'LL ACTUALLY CREATE
Forget vague "you'll understand interoperability" promises. You'll create three professional artifacts used in actual healthcare organizations
1. Interface Design Document (IDD) - Module 1:
A complete requirements document defining scope, data mapping, patient matching, security protocols, and Total Cost of Ownership. This is the artifact that gets executive approval and prevents the $500K question nobody asks: "Should we even build this?"
What you'll learn
• The five decision gates that determine build vs buy vs automate
• FHIR vs HL7 selection criteria (no technical background needed)
• Data scoping using the minimalism principle (why less = better)
• TCO calculation including 5-year maintenance (the costs PMs miss)
• Success criteria beyond "it works" (functional, adoption, outcomes)
What you won't learn: How to write FHIR queries or parse HL7 messages (that's your engineers' job)
2. Implementation Plan - Module 2: ~40 minutes
A governance and execution plan that leads your team from requirements through go-live. Choose your path
Path A: Enterprise Implementation (for hospitals/health systems)
• RACI matrices with specific names (not vague "teams")
• Risk registers and steering forum structures
• Testing strategies (workflow, data quality, exceptions, volume)
• Go-live checklists and rollback plans
• Hypercare and operations transition
Path B: Marketplace/SMART App Implementation (for digital health startups)
• Product scope for multi-EHR scalability (SMART launch contexts, FHIR resources, OAuth scopes)
• Repeatable customer enablement (not custom builds per customer)
• Testing at scale across 100+ diverse EHR configurations
• Versioning, backward compatibility, and breaking change policies
What you'll learn: How to lead implementation without coding What you won't learn: How to configure integration engines or implement OAuth
3. Interoperability Maintenance Plan - Module 3:
The plan nobody teaches but everyone needs. Keep interfaces running for 3-5+ years without becoming technical debt.
What you'll learn
• Initial TCO vs Operational TCO (why $150K projects become $300K liabilities)
• RASCI for long-term ownership (preventing "who's responsible?" confusion)
• Monthly cost tracking and quarterly ROI reporting to leadership
• Preventing five failure modes that kill interfaces post-launch
• When to sunset an interface (exit strategies)
What you won't learn: How to troubleshoot HL7 routing errors (that's operational support's job)
THE HONEST TIME COMMITMENT
• Core content: 9 lectures, 84 slides, ~3-4 hours of video
• Creating artifacts for YOUR project: Add 10-15 hours
• Total investment: Plan for 15-20 hours to complete the course AND create usable deliverables
This isn't a weekend crash course. It's a structured program that builds professional artifacts you'll use Monday morning.
WHO THIS IS ACTUALLY FOR
Perfect if you are
• Product Manager in digital health or healthcare IT
• Clinical Informatics Analyst implementing EHRs (Epic, Cerner, Meditech)
• Healthcare IT Professional transitioning to product/leadership roles
• Digital Health Startup Founder building SMART on FHIR apps
• Healthcare Consultant scoping integration projects for clients
• Business Analyst writing requirements for integration vendors
• Project Manager leading Epic implementations or EHR replacements
• Anyone who needs to LEAD interoperability without CODING
Not right if you are
• Software developer wanting to code FHIR APIs (try a developer bootcamp instead)
• Seeking deep technical implementation details (we focus on leadership, not coding)
• Looking for certification exam prep (this is practical skills, not test prep)
• EHR end-user seeking super-user training (this is about integrations, not workflows)
• Expecting to "master" FHIR/HL7 in a weekend (realistic: 15-20 hours commitment)
WHAT MAKES THIS DIFFERENT
Most healthcare interoperability content is either
• Too technical (for developers, full of code samples you'll never use)
• Too vague (high-level overviews with no actionable frameworks)
This course is neither.
It's built for the "technical enough" professional-someone who
• Doesn't write code but needs to spec what gets built
• Doesn't configure systems but needs to validate implementations
• Doesn't troubleshoot errors but needs to define what success looks like
• Leads technical teams without being the most technical person in the room
THE FRAMEWORKS YOU'LL USE IMMEDIATELY
• The Five Decision Gates: Should you even build this interface?
• FHIR vs HL7 Decision Matrix: Choose patterns based on use case, not hype
• The Minimalism Principle: Why less data = better interfaces
• RASCI for Operational Ownership: Specific names, not vague teams
• Initial vs Operational TCO: The dynamic cost model that prevents budget spirals
• The Six Pillars of Sustainable Interfaces: What makes maintenance succeed or fail
• Testing Leadership Framework: Workflow, data quality, exceptions, volume-what you must validate
These aren't theoretical concepts. They're decision-making tools you'll apply to your actual projects.
DOWNLOADABLE TEMPLATES INCLUDED
You get professional templates
Blank Templates (customize for your project)
• Interface Design Document (IDD) - 10 sections
• Enterprise Implementation Plan - 6 sections
• Marketplace Implementation Plan - 6 sections
• Interoperability Maintenance Plan - 8 sections
Filled Examples (see what "done" looks like)
• Lab Results Integration - Complete IDD
• Lab Results Integration - Enterprise Implementation Plan
• Lab Results Integration - Maintenance Plan
All examples use the same realistic scenario (LabCorp LIS → Epic EHR) so you see the progression from scoping through implementation to long-term operations.
WHAT YOU WON'T GET (And Why That's Okay)
This course intentionally does NOT cover
Technical Implementation: You won't learn to write FHIR queries, parse HL7 v2 messages, configure Mirth Connect, or implement OAuth flows. Why: That's your engineers' job. You're learning to lead them, not replace them.
Developer Bootcamp: No coding exercises, no GitHub repos, no API tutorials. Why: You're a product manager or analyst, not a software engineer. Different role = different skills.
Certification Prep: This won't prepare you for CAHIMS, CPHIMS, or vendor certifications. Why: Those test memorization. This teaches application. Different goals.
EHR Super-User Training: Not covering Epic workflows, Cerner build, or clinical documentation. Why: This is about connecting systems, not using them.
Vendor Product Training: Not specific to Rhapsody, Mirth, Redox, or any single vendor. Why: Principles are vendor-agnostic. Implementation details change; frameworks don't.
Comprehensive FHIR/HL7 Standards: We cover what PMs need to know, not everything that exists. Why: You need decision-making knowledge, not encyclopedic reference.
THE REAL OUTCOMES
By the end of this course, you will
• Make confident pattern decisions (FHIR vs HL7 vs API) without needing a computer science degree
• Calculate realistic TCO that includes the 5-year maintenance costs other PMs miss
• Lead technical teams without being intimidated by engineers speaking technical jargon
• Prevent scope creep using documented requirements and change control processes
• Define comprehensive testing that catches issues before go-live (not just "did data flow?")
• Track Operational TCO month-by-month so costs don't spiral silently over 3 years
• Justify ongoing investment to leadership with quarterly ROI metrics
• Have three professional artifacts ready to use in your organization Monday morning
THE INSTRUCTOR PROMISE
This course is taught by someone who has
• Led interoperability projects that actually shipped (not just theoretical knowledge)
• Failed at integrations and learned expensive lessons (so you don't have to)
• Taught health informatics at the university level (evidence-based, not opinion-based)
• Built both enterprise integrations AND marketplace apps (both contexts covered)
• Spent 15+ years translating between clinical users, engineers, and executives
You're not learning from a developer who thinks PMs should code. You're learning from a health informatics professor and product leader who knows exactly what non-technical professionals need.
Most healthcare interoperability training is built for the wrong audience-either too technical for PMs or too vague for practical application.
This course is built specifically for the "technical enough" professional who leads interoperability projects without writing code.
You'll walk away with three artifacts, multiple decision frameworks, and the confidence to lead your next FHIR/HL7 project without being intimidated by the technical complexity.
No overpromises. No shortcuts. Just practical frameworks that work.
Who this course is for
■ Product Managers in Digital Health - Leading SMART on FHIR apps, EHR integrations, or health tech products
■ Clinical Informatics Analysts - Implementing EHRs (Epic, Cerner) and managing interface teams
■ Healthcare IT Professionals - Transitioning from technical roles to product/leadership positions
■ Digital Health Startup Founders - Building apps that integrate with Epic, Cerner, or other EHRs
■ Business Analysts in Healthcare - Writing requirements for integration vendors or internal IT teams
■ Project Managers - Leading Epic/Cerner implementations, EHR replacements, or system integrations
■ NOT FOR: Software developers looking to code FHIR APIs (this is a product/leadership course, not a coding bootcamp)
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