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In some cases OIDs may apply to a specific county/realm only, e.g. the namespace identifiers for the US Social Security Number (SSN) or the Dutch Citizen Service Number (BSN) or the ICD-10 International Classification of Diseases 10th Revision for the use in Germany only (ICD10gm). This can be indictaed by ''realm'' which is either the code of country or "UV" for universal. For values see code system [[#CountryCodes| CountryCodes]].
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In some cases OIDs may apply to a specific county/realm only, e.g. the namespace identifiers for the US Social Security Number (SSN) or the Dutch Citizen Service Number (BSN) or the codes system representing ICD-10 International Classification of Diseases 10th Revision for the use in Germany only (ICD10gm). This can be indictaed by ''realm'' which is either the code of country or "UV" for universal. For values see code system [[#CountryCodes| CountryCodes]].
  
 
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Version vom 6. Februar 2012, 15:40 Uhr

Inhaltsverzeichnis

History of Titles

  • ISO/TC 215/WG 3 NWI Proposal 680, TS "Health Informatics - Communication model and XMLInterface Specification for OID Registries (ComoXOID)", 2008.
  • ISO 13582 - Health informatics - Communication and metadata model and XML-interface specification for OID registries in healthcare - Technical Specification. 2010
  • ISO 13582 - Health informatics - Sharing of OID registry information - Technical Specification. 2010

Stage

30.99 CD approved for registration as DIS

Legenda

In this specification the follwing symbols are used.

Scope

This International Standard specifies the mandatory and optional information to be recorded in any registry of OIDs, using an information model.

It specifies what parts of that information shall be regarded as public, and what parts shall be subject to security and privacy requirements.

In detail, this International Standard:

  • specifies an information model and a corresponding XML format for the export of the contents of an OID registry, suitable e.g. for import to a different OID registry
  • references common uses cases for OID registries/repositories
  • references an Object Identifier Resolution System (ORS) which provides a look-up mechanism for information related to an object identifier, with guidance on the use of that facility.

Normative References

The following normative documents contain provisions which, through reference in this text, constitute provisions of this ISO 13582. For dated references, subsequent amendments to, or revisions of, any of these publications do not apply. However, parties to agreements based on this ISO 13582 are encouraged to investigate the possibility of applying the most recent editions of the normative documents indicated below. For undated references, the latest edition of the normative document referred to applies. Members of ISO and IEC maintain registers of currently valid International Standards.

ISO/IEC 8601:2004, Data elements and interchange formats -- Information interchange -- Representation of dates and times
ISO/IEC 8824:1990(E), Information technology -- Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1): Specification of basic notation
ISO/IEC 21090:2011, Health Informatics — Harmonizied datatypes for information interchange
ISO/IEC 22220, Health informatics — Identification of subjects of health care
IETF RFC 1738 - Uniform Resource Locators (URL)
IETF RFC 2396 - Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax
IETF RFC 2806 - URLs for Telephone Calls
IETF RFC 2978 - IANA Charset Registration Procedures
IETF RFC 3066 - Tags for the Identification of Languages
HL7 V3- Data Types - Abstract Specification (R2)

Terms, definitions and abbreviated terms

Terms and definitions

OID registry and OID repository

An OID registry maintains a list of OIDs.

Typically additional information (metadata, such as responsible organizations, a human readable name, a description of the object, and other information that is needed for any meaningful use of the object identified) associated with the OID is stored also. With that, a registry is then a repository at the same time.

Maintaining the list (and associated metadata) happens regardless whether it is an official register for allocations of new OIDs under a given OID arc, or just a copy of information from other registries.

Official OID registries/repositories responsible for allocations of new OIDs under a given OID arc are Registration Authorities.

Registration Authority (RA)

A Registration Authority (RA) is responsible for allocating child arcs to the OID that it manages (issuing authority).

It ensures that an integer is used once among the subsequent arcs (child OIDs). As much as possible, it avoids the same identifier (beginning with a lowercase letter) being used for multiple sub-arcs.

Such information is typically stored in the OID registry/repository but it is important to understand that an OID first need to be officially allocated by an RA before it can be described in an OID repository.

For each child OID, the RA also keeps a record of additional information (like name of a contact person, postal address, telephone and fax numbers, email address, etc.) about the Responsible Authority for that child OID.

A responsible authority for a child OID is formally becoming a RA for that child OID, as it may allocate sub-arcs.

Responsible (Managing) Authority (MA)

A Responsible (Managing) Authority (MA) is used to indicate the person (if known) and organization who is currently in charge of managing the OID.

Once a responsible authority is allocating sub-arcs and registering information on these sub-arcs, it also becomes the Registration Authority for these sub-arcs.

Submitting Authority (SA)

This information is optional and reflects the person or organization that submitted the original OID allocation request.

Relationship to and discussion of definitions from other sources

Current Registrant

In some OID registries, Current Registrants are stored. The definitions from other sources say that the Current Registrant is used to indicate the person (if known) who is currently in charge of managing the OID, allocating sub-arcs and registering information on these sub-arcs.

Discussion: simply managing an OID (for example for a code system) is a Responsible Authority MA. Potentially, a responsible authority may become a Registration Authority RA for a sub-arc if it allocates sub-arcs.

First Registrant

In some OID registries, First Registrants are stored. The definitions from other sources say that the First Registrant is used to indicate the very first person (if known) who was responsible to manage the OID and who created it in the first instance.

Discussion: Suggestion is to distinguish between a Registration Authority RA (person if known, and organization) who issued (= allocated the instance of) an OID and a Submitting Authority SA who submitted the OID allocation request (which may be the same instance). In this sense the First Registrant is the Registration Authority RA.

Note: Due to a comment from the Canadian ISO representatives Registration Authority even could be renamed to Issuing Authority.

First Registration Authority

The first Registration Authority of an OID is the very first person or company to whom the OID was allocated by the RA of the superior OID. According to Rec. ITU-T X.660 | ISO/IEC 9834-1, the first RA can't be changed (if the responsibility is transferred to someone else, the information is recorded in the "Current Registration Authority" section, without changing the "First Registration Authority" section).

Discussion: This is the Registration Authority RA that allocated the OID.

Rec. ITU-T X.660 | ISO/IEC 9834-1

In ITU-T Recommendation X.660 the following definitions are given.

3.6.8 registration authority: An entity such as an organization, a standard or an automated facility that performs registration of one or more types of objects (see also International Registration Authority).
3.6.2 administrative role (of a registration authority): Assigning and making available unambiguous names according to the Recommendation | International Standard defining the procedures for the authority.
3.6.14 technical role (of a registration authority): Recording definitions of the objects to which names are assigned and verifying that these definitions are in accordance with the Recommendation | International Standard defining the form of the definition.

This Technical Standard does not use administrative or technical roles.

Abbreviations

The following abbreviations are used for the terms defined in this International Standard and its annexes.

HL7 Health Level Seven Inc

IETF Internet Engineering Task Force

OID Object Identifier

OMG Object Management Group

W3C World Wide Web Consortium

XML Extensible Markup Language

Legenda of Tables and Symbols

Class Attribute and Association Tables

The Class Attribute Tables (information model) make use of the following table headline:

Attribute Description DT Card Conf Length

where

DT = datatype conformant to the ISO 21090 datatypes,

Card = cardinality, e.g. 0..1 or 1..* etc.

Conf = conformance, either

  • mandatory which means that the information SHALL be present in every instance of an extract of an OID registry/repository, or
  • required which means that the information SHOULD be provided if there are no privacy reasons for masking that information, or
  • optional when information is optional.

Length = recommended length (as an implementation hint e.g. for data base string lengths etc).

In addition, the Association Tables (information model) make use of the following table headline:

Association Description Class Card Conf

where

Association = the association name to the associated class

Class = the associated class name

Object Identifiers in healthcare

OID (Object Identifiers) are unique identifiers for any kind of objects. They are defined in Rec. ITU-T X.660 | ISO/IEC 9834-1[1] [2]. This identification system for objects and concepts makes reliable electronic information exchange possible. Administration and Registration is regulated by a set of rules (see also ISO/NWIP/TR "Health Informatics – Guidance for maintenance of Object Identifiers OID"[3]).

The precise designation of objects and concepts is a pre-requisite for the standardized exchange of information. A globally unique identifier for each of these concepts will help to ensure international exchangeability of objects within different applications (e.g. healthcare information systems). For example, OIDs are often used within HL7 messages and documents, and Rec. ITU-T X.509 certificates to provide this unique identification.

In the exchange of healthcare information, especially between loosely coupled systems, additional information about the object being identified is generally very beneficial; this is information that is typically not contained in a transaction of data between systems but is reference information about the objects contained in the transaction. There is a minimal set of such information, such as Responsible Organizations, a human readable name, a description of the object, and other such information that is needed for any meaningful use of the objects identified. Since such information may not be locally available to a system examining the communicated objects, it makes sense to have such information available in a standardized form, and accessed by using the OID to identify this information. Such information, referred to as the OID metadata, is the bulk of the information housed in an OID Registry.

Today, due to lack of standardization of the set of metadata (both content and structure), existing OID registries are not compatible. Contents, attributes and rules of the assignment of OIDs of existing registries are incompatible and often dissimilar. Many registries still distribute OIDs in a form only suitable for direct text processing (like spreadsheets) that is error prone and hard to automate. There is a need to store and transfer collections of OIDs and also to keep some registries completely in sync, maintaining the contents and the structure of metadata of each of the registered OIDs e.g. descriptions, comments, versions, links, relations, responsible organizations and persons, etc.

Data exchange can be facilitated by a standardized representation of a required minimum set of metadata as an XML structure together with the associated checks of underlying constraints and business rules. This XML structure for importing and exporting OIDs amongst different registries should be achieved for supporting eHealth applications. In addition, the failure to have a standard for the operations needed to coordinated and synchronize the contents of disparate OID registries leads to confusion and ambiguity for the community that uses eHealth information containing references to objects identified by OIDs.

There are currently at least hundreds of OID registries in active use throughout the world. These are sponsored and operated by disparate entities, ranging from national governments, to individual companies or standards organizations, to individuals in a specialized area or industry. In many cases, more than one of these registries address the same industry segment, and have overlapping content, i.e. specific OIDs exist in both, or worse, different OIDs identifying the same object exist in both. This distributed set of disparate registries servicing a particular industry (specifically Healthcare IT) has led to awkward and error prone searching processes. To get information about existing OIDs, a search within all existing registries is needed, for example to avoid duplicate assignment of multiple OIDs to one and the same concept. In order to standardize the activities to synchronise all existing OID registries and to ensure further interoperability it is essential to have a defined exchange format and business rules for maintenance of the OID registries that must cooperate in a particular industry.

Some OID registries are operated by essentially volunteer organizations, such as Standards Bodies. The burden of administrative tasks is such that multiple individuals, often in different geographical locations, must participate to share the workload. Thus in addition to distributed Registry instances, administrative functions need to also be distributed, both on single and potentially across multiple Registries. There is a need for the standardization of a minimum set of administrative access and operational functions such that developers of Registries can deploy standard mechanisms to streamline and increase accuracy and productivity of these maintenance operations.

This Technical Standard describes a generic exchange format that will cover the minimal set of metadata and associated rules for OIDs of existing registries. It specifies principles and processes that should be explored/implemented by developers and data administrators of OID registries and their applicant bodies. The primary target group for this document are those establishing OID registries and those (industry, government bodies) using the services maintained by such organizations.

Additional descriptions

A general description of the registration procedures for various parts of the object identifier tree, by reference to other specifications and links to other documents is given in ISO 13581 - Health informatics - Guidance for maintenance of object identifiers, OID - Technical Report.

In informative Annex A, a description possible of sub trees reflecting OID categories for e-health related OIDs is given.

Informative Annex B specifies an Object Identifier Resolution System (ORS) for e-health related OIDs based on RESTful Web Services.

Informative Annex C references a W3C schema for the XML representation.

Related work

This work is related to discussions about OID in the work programme of TC 215 WG3, HL7, ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 6, ITU-T SG 17 and other organizations dealing with OIDs and OID registries.

Approach

Following an extensive analysis of the currently available international OID register for health care systems, a basic data set and a corresponding XML representation as an exchange format need to be created for registering and exchanging OID-related data. To collect the very basic requirements to such a format an analysis of several registers (e.g. HL7 International[4] register and several European registers[5][6] was performed so far in 2009 (see Table 1). The analysis included the contents, attributes and even the rules of the assignment of OID.

Table 1: Analysis of some data elements of different OID registries and repositories (analysis as of 2009)
DIMDI France Telecom-Orange OID repository HL7 INTERNATIONAL
DESCRIPTIONENGLISH DESCRIPTION, INFORMATION OBJECT_DESCRIPTION
DESCRIPTIONGERMAN
ASN1NOTATION ASN1-NOTATION COMP_OID
MODIFICATIONDATE MODIFICATION-DATE
CREATIONDATE CREATION-DATE DATE_FINALIZED
APPLICATIONDATE
TYPE OID_TYPE
FAMILY LAST-NAME NAME
GIVEN FIRST-NAME NAME

Only a few of the registers specified an (XML-) exchange format. Due to lack of a common understanding of OID registry requirements, data fields must be mapped (manually) when OID information needed to be exchanged.

Information model

In order to exchange OID and their metadata between different registries and applications the following additional data items beyond the OID itself need to be taken under consideration (see also [7] [8]):

  • descriptions
  • status information
  • categorization
  • time information
  • comments
  • versions
  • links
  • relationships to other OIDs and external sources
  • registering and responsible organizations
  • associated persons.

An information model with all classes, attributes and their properties aiming on a common understanding of the requirements of an OID registry has been created (Figure 1).

OID Registry Model (Draft)

XML exchange format

Data exchange can be facilitated by a standardized representation of the complete set of information as an XML structure together with the associated checks of underlying constraints and business rules. This XML structure for importing and exporting OID amongst different registries and other healthcare applications is aiming on the availability of reliable information about OIDs.

The following sections summarise and explain classes and their attributes.

Registry

This is the basic information about the OID-Registry hosting the OIDs.

Oid-registry.jpg

Attributes

Attribute Description DT Card Conf Length
validTime validity time interval IVL_TS 1..* mandatory -
scopedOIDs List of scoped root OIDs ST.OID 0..* optional 64
name Official name of the OID registry ST 1..1 mandatory 64
description Description of the OID registry, possible in multiple languages ED 0..* optional -

validTime

This is the validity time interval, i.e. the begin (and end) time when this registry is/was responsible for registering OIDs. This can be a list of intervals.

scopedOIDs

List of scoped root OIDs, i.e. the OIDs for which this OID repository is responsible for registration

name

Official name of the OID registry

description

A description of the OID registry/repository, possible in multiple languages

Associations

Association Description Class Card Conf
hostingOrganization Hosting organization Organization 1..* mandatory
person Contact person(s) Person 1..* mandatory
oid List of OIDs Oid 0..* required

Example

<registry>

    <validTime>
        <low value="20100501"/>
    </validTime>

    <scopedOID value="1.2.3.4.5"/>

    <name value="The best OID registry ever"/>
    <description language="en-US" value="This is a test OID registry, although the best"/>

    <person> ... </person>
    <organization> ... </organization>

    <oid> ... </oid>

</registry>

Oid

This class contains the registered OID and the associated meta data.

Oid-OID.jpg

Attributes

Attribute Description DT Card Conf Length
dotNotation registered OID, dot notation ST.OID 1..1 mandatory 64
asn1Notation ASN.1 notation ST.ASN1 0..1 optional 128
iriNotation IRI notation ST.IRI 0..1 optional 128
symbolicName symbolic name ST.SYMB 0..1 optional 128
category OID category CS 1..1 required -
status OID status CS 1..1 mandatory -
creationDate date of creation TS 0..1 optional -
realm countries CS 0..* optional -
description textual description ED 1..* mandatory -

dotNotation

The OID in dot notation of SNMP or ASN.1/XER.

Example:

2.16.528

asn1Notation

The OID in ASN.1 notation with (optional) identifiers and numbers.

Examples:

{joint-iso-itu-t(2) country(16) nl(528)}
{itu-t(0) recommendation(0) a(1)}

iriNotation

The OID in Internationalized Resource Identifier[9] (IRI) notation.

Example:

oid:/Country/528

symbolicName / Secondary Arc Identifier

A symbolic short name, unique among the siblings of the arc of the OID.

The ISO rules on Secondary Arc Identifiers, as laid out in Rec. ITU-T | ISO/IEC 9834-1 Procedures for Registration Authorities, section 6.2.2, apply:

  • identifiers of an arc are required to commence with a lowercase letter, and to contain only letters, digits, and hyphens.
  • the last characters shall not be a hyphen
  • there shall be no two consecutive hyphens in the name

Example

nl

category

The type/category of the OID; enumeration, values see value set OIDCategory.

There are actually two main types of OIDs: leafs (id of an object), and nodes representing an ontological branch.

The types of node OID may be

  • a registration authority (RA) or
  • a structure for the management of OIDs.

The proposal for sub categories of leaf OIDs are

  • identifiers of an instance of an object (for example a person)
  • namespace identifiers (for example code systems, value sets)

status

Status of the OID. This is an enumeration, for values see value set OIDstatus

creationDate

The creationDate is used to describe when the OID was first registered. It is not the date when the OID description is submitted to the OID repository. The creationDate, once set, never changes.

realm

In some cases OIDs may apply to a specific county/realm only, e.g. the namespace identifiers for the US Social Security Number (SSN) or the Dutch Citizen Service Number (BSN) or the codes system representing ICD-10 International Classification of Diseases 10th Revision for the use in Germany only (ICD10gm). This can be indictaed by realm which is either the code of country or "UV" for universal. For values see code system CountryCodes.

description

This element contains a free text description of the OID ("what is the OID?"). The text typically contains an explanation but also can contain:

  • explicit versioning aspects
  • licensing information
  • Intellectual Property rights information
  • trademarks.

The datatype ED allows for a thumbnail child element. A thumbnail may be populated describing a short description of the OID (sometimes referred to as identifier name).

Example:

<description language="en-US" value="this is plain text as a long description">
   <thumbnail value="short text"/>
</description>

Associations

Association Description Class Card Conf
registrationAuthority Registration Authority RegistrationAuthority 1..1 required
responsibleAuthority Responsible Authority ResponsibleAuthority 1..* required
submittingAuthority Submitting Authority SubmittingAuthority 0..1 optional
additionalProperty Additional Properties AdditionalProperty 0..* optional
historyAnnotation History Annotations HistoryAnnotation 0..* optional
reference References Reference 0..* optional

RegistrationAuthority

Oid-RegistrationAuthority.jpg

This class represents the Registration Authority (RA).

Attributes

Attribute Description DT Card Conf Length
code RA role code CS 1..1 mandatory -

code

The code holds information about the role type of the RA. Valid codes are listed in RoleCodes.

Associations

Association Description Class Card Conf
scopingOrganization Scoping organization Organization 1..1 mandatory
person Contact person(s) Person 0..1 optional

ResponsibleAuthority

This is a class representing the (managing) authority that is responsible for the object that is identified by the OID (not for the OID itself).

Oid-ResponsibleAuthority.jpg

Attributes

Attribute Description DT Card Conf Length
code role code CS 1..1 mandatory -
statusCode status code CS 1..1 mandatory -
validTime validity time IVL_TS 1..* mandatory -

code

The code holds information about the role type of the ResponsibleAuthority. Valid codes are listed in RoleCodes.

statusCode

The statusCode holds information about the status of the ResponsibleAuthority. Valid codes are listed in RoleStatus.

validTime

This is an interval of time, representing the period when the ResponsibleAuthority is/was responsible for the object that is identified by the OID. If the ResponsibleAuthority is still responsible, only validTime.low is populated.

Associations

Association Description Class Card Conf
scopingOrganization Scoping organization Organization 1..1 mandatory
person Contact person(s) Person 0..1 optional

SubmittingAuthority

This is a class representing the submitting authority that originally asked for a new OID.

Oid-SubmittingAuthority.jpg

(Please note: to avoid redundancy, the classes Organization and Peron are shown with attributes here, at all other places only a "shadow" class of these two classes is shown)

Attributes

Attribute Description DT Card Conf Length
code role code CS 1..1 mandatory -
applicationDate date of application TS 0..1 optional -

code

The code holds information about the role type of the submitting authority. Valid codes are listed in RoleCodes.

applicationDate

Date of application (submission or certified submission) of the requested OID.

Associations

Association Description Class Card Conf
scopingOrganization Scoping organization Organization 1..1 mandatory
person Contact person(s) Person 1..1 mandatory

HistoryAnnotation

This class reflects historical annotations of the OID and records the changes of any data over time.

Oid-HistoryAnnotation.jpg

Attributes

Attribute Description Datatype Cardinality Conformance Recommended Length
annotationDate date annotation was created TS 0..1 required -
text annotation ED 1..1 mandatory -

Reference

Oid-Reference.jpg

This class provides a link to

  • other data sources, code tables, value sets, descriptions etc; typically this is a URL and always points to an object with different semantics than the OID itself.
  • other OIDs (within or outside this OID registry) in order to be able to express that an OID has been superseded/replaced or that there is a preferred OID.

Attributes

Attribute Description DT Card Conf Length
ref reference URI URI 1..1 mandatory -
type type of reference CS 1..1 mandatory -
lastVisitedDate date URI last visited TS 0..1 optional -

ref

The referenced URI.

type

The nature of the reference is coded in the type attribute, vocabulary is ReferenceType.

lastVisitedDate

Specifies the date the UIR was last visited.

AdditionalProperty

Oid-AdditionalProperty.jpg

This class reflects additional properties of an OID that might be used to fit business rules that cannot (or should not) be standardized. This includes:

  • additional categories
  • additional status information
  • tags, simple text
  • coded properties

It is made of

  • attribute, describing the type of the additional property
  • value, the value of the additional property.
Attribute Description DT Card Conf Length
attribute Additional property type ST 1..1 mandatory -
value Additional property value ST 1..1 mandatory -

Person

A class to hold the properties of a person.

Oid-Person.jpg

Attributes

Attribute Description DT Card Conf Length
name person's name EN.PN 1..* mandatory -
addr person's address AD 0..* optional -
telecom person's telecommunication contact TEL 0..* optional -

Organization

A class to hold the properties of an organization.

Oid-Organization.jpg

Attributes

Attribute Description DT Card Conf Length
id id (OID) of the organization ST.OID 0..* optional -
name name of the organization ST 1..* mandatory -
addr address of the organization AD 0..* optional -
telecom telecommunication contact of the organization TEL 0..* optional -

List of Codes and Enumerations

CountryCodes

ISO 3166-1 alpha two letter country codes are used[10][11]. This list states the country names as given in ISO 3166-1 and the corresponding ISO 3166-1-alpha-2 code elements.

Example:

NL

LanguageCodes

Reflects the Human Language. Language is specified conformant to RFC 3066 (Tags for the Identification of Languages). The format is

ss[-CC]

where ss is the language code drawn from ISO-639-1[12], and CC is the country code, conformant to ISO-3166 alpha-2.

Example:

en-US

OIDcategory

Level Code Description
0 N node
1 NRA registration authority (RA)
1 NMN structure for the management of OIDs (it is not good practice but we know that some of these nodes in some registries also identify objects, which should not be)
0 L leaf
1 LIO an instance of an object
1 LNS a namespace identifier

OIDstatus

This code reflects the status of the OID. Valid values are:

Level Code Description
0 pending OID assignment pending
0 complete assignment complete
0 retired OID retired/withdrawn
0 unknown status of the OID unknown

ReferenceType

The type of reference covers the following values:

Level Code Description
0 RPLC replaced by OID
0 PREF preferred OID
0 LINK link access (to code and value set tables)
0 IDSD identification scheme documentation

RoleCodes

This covers the kind of role:

Level Code Description
0 PRI primary
0 SEC secondary
0 OBO on behalf of
0 CON contact person

RoleStatus

This covers the status of role:

Level Code Description
0 active active
0 terminated terminated

Data types

ISO data types[13] are used for the XML representation of data. In some cases additional flavors or constraints are defined.

The following section gives examples and describes the restrictions / contraints on the generic specification.

Address AD

Example:

<addr use="HP">
 <part type="STR" value="Windsteiner Weg"/>
 <part type="BNR" value="54a"/>
 <part type="CNT" code="DEU" codeSystem=" 1.0.3166.1.2" value="D"/>
 <part type="ZIP" value="14165"/>
 <part type="CTY" value="Berlin"/>
</addr>

Coded Simple CS

A coded attribute. The attribute is always bound to a specific code system mentioned in the code systems section.

Example:

<statusCode code="OBO"/>

Encapsulated Data ED

(for mime: Text and HTML only (flavor id ED:TEXT, with language code) Example:

<text value="this is plain text" language="en" mediaType="text/plain"/> 
<text value="dieses ist normaler Text" language="de" mediaType="text/plain"/>

Entity Name for a person EN.PN

Example:

<name use="OR C">
 <part type="GIV" value="Selby"/>
 <part type="FAM" qualifier="SP" value="Butt"/>
 <part type="FAM" value="Hadrian"/>
</name>

Interval of time stamp IVL_TS

Example:

<validTime>
  <low value="20101201" />
  <high value="20101224" />
</validTime>

String ST

A character string

Example:

  <description value="I am a piece of text"/>

Object Identifier (dot notation) ST.OID

This is actually a character string (ST) with a certain pattern.

The pattern is:

\{?\s*(0|[1-9][0-9]*)(\.(0|[1-9][0-9]*))*\s*\}?

Example:

<oid value="1.2.3.4.5.0.6.7.8.9"/>

Object Identifier (asn1 notation) ST.ASN1

This is actually a character string (ST) with a certain pattern.

The pattern is:

\{?\s*(([a-z][a-zA-Z0-9\-]*\s*((\s*(0|[1-9][0-9]*)\s*\))?|(0|[1-9][0-9]*))\s*){2,}\s*\}?

Object Identifier (iri notation) ST.IRI

This is actually a character string (ST) with a certain pattern.

The pattern is:

/^[a-z](?:[-a-z0-9\+\.])*:(?:\/\/(?:(?:%[0-9a-f][0-9a-f]|[-a-z0-9\._~\x{A0}-\x{D7FF}\x{F900}-\x{FDCF}\x{FDF0}-\x{FFEF}\x{10000}-\x{1FFFD}\x{20000}-\x{2FFFD}\x{30000}-\x{3FFFD}\x{40000}-\x{4FFFD}\x{50000}-\x{5FFFD}\x{60000}-\x{6FFFD}\x{70000}-\x{7FFFD}\x{80000}-\x{8FFFD}\x{90000}-\x{9FFFD}\x{A0000}-\x{AFFFD}\x{B0000}-\x{BFFFD}\x{C0000}-\x{CFFFD}\x{D0000}-\x{DFFFD}\x{E1000}-\x{EFFFD}!\$&'\(\)\*\+,;=:])*@)?(?:\[(?:(?:(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:){6}(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:[0-9a-f]{1,4}|(?:[0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])(?:\.(?:[0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])){3})|::(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:){5}(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:[0-9a-f]{1,4}|(?:[0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])(?:\.(?:[0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])){3})|(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4})?::(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:){4}(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:[0-9a-f]{1,4}|(?:[0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])(?:\.(?:[0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])){3})|(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:[0-9a-f]{1,4})?::(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:){3}(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:[0-9a-f]{1,4}|(?:[0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])(?:\.(?:[0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])){3})|(?:(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:){0,2}[0-9a-f]{1,4})?::(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:){2}(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:[0-9a-f]{1,4}|(?:[0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])(?:\.(?:[0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])){3})|(?:(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:){0,3}[0-9a-f]{1,4})?::[0-9a-f]{1,4}:(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:[0-9a-f]{1,4}|(?:[0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])(?:\.(?:[0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])){3})|(?:(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:){0,4}[0-9a-f]{1,4})?::(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:[0-9a-f]{1,4}|(?:[0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])(?:\.(?:[0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])){3})|(?:(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:){0,5}[0-9a-f]{1,4})?::[0-9a-f]{1,4}|(?:(?:[0-9a-f]{1,4}:){0,6}[0-9a-f]{1,4})?::)|v[0-9a-f]+[-a-z0-9\._~!\$&'\(\)\*\+,;=:]+)\]|(?:[0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])(?:\.(?:[0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])){3}|(?:%[0-9a-f][0-9a-f]|[-a-z0-9\._~\x{A0}-\x{D7FF}\x{F900}-\x{FDCF}\x{FDF0}-\x{FFEF}\x{10000}-\x{1FFFD}\x{20000}-\x{2FFFD}\x{30000}-\x{3FFFD}\x{40000}-\x{4FFFD}\x{50000}-\x{5FFFD}\x{60000}-\x{6FFFD}\x{70000}-\x{7FFFD}\x{80000}-\x{8FFFD}\x{90000}-\x{9FFFD}\x{A0000}-\x{AFFFD}\x{B0000}-\x{BFFFD}\x{C0000}-\x{CFFFD}\x{D0000}-\x{DFFFD}\x{E1000}-\x{EFFFD}!\$&'\(\)\*\+,;=@])*)(?::[0-9]*)?(?:\/(?:(?:%[0-9a-f][0-9a-f]|[-a-z0-9\._~\x{A0}-\x{D7FF}\x{F900}-\x{FDCF}\x{FDF0}-\x{FFEF}\x{10000}-\x{1FFFD}\x{20000}-\x{2FFFD}\x{30000}-\x{3FFFD}\x{40000}-\x{4FFFD}\x{50000}-\x{5FFFD}\x{60000}-\x{6FFFD}\x{70000}-\x{7FFFD}\x{80000}-\x{8FFFD}\x{90000}-\x{9FFFD}\x{A0000}-\x{AFFFD}\x{B0000}-\x{BFFFD}\x{C0000}-\x{CFFFD}\x{D0000}-\x{DFFFD}\x{E1000}-\x{EFFFD}!\$&'\(\)\*\+,;=:@]))*)*|\/(?:(?:(?:(?:%[0-9a-f][0-9a-f]|[-a-z0-9\._~\x{A0}-\x{D7FF}\x{F900}-\x{FDCF}\x{FDF0}-\x{FFEF}\x{10000}-\x{1FFFD}\x{20000}-\x{2FFFD}\x{30000}-\x{3FFFD}\x{40000}-\x{4FFFD}\x{50000}-\x{5FFFD}\x{60000}-\x{6FFFD}\x{70000}-\x{7FFFD}\x{80000}-\x{8FFFD}\x{90000}-\x{9FFFD}\x{A0000}-\x{AFFFD}\x{B0000}-\x{BFFFD}\x{C0000}-\x{CFFFD}\x{D0000}-\x{DFFFD}\x{E1000}-\x{EFFFD}!\$&'\(\)\*\+,;=:@]))+)(?:\/(?:(?:%[0-9a-f][0-9a-f]|[-a-z0-9\._~\x{A0}-\x{D7FF}\x{F900}-\x{FDCF}\x{FDF0}-\x{FFEF}\x{10000}-\x{1FFFD}\x{20000}-\x{2FFFD}\x{30000}-\x{3FFFD}\x{40000}-\x{4FFFD}\x{50000}-\x{5FFFD}\x{60000}-\x{6FFFD}\x{70000}-\x{7FFFD}\x{80000}-\x{8FFFD}\x{90000}-\x{9FFFD}\x{A0000}-\x{AFFFD}\x{B0000}-\x{BFFFD}\x{C0000}-\x{CFFFD}\x{D0000}-\x{DFFFD}\x{E1000}-\x{EFFFD}!\$&'\(\)\*\+,;=:@]))*)*)?|(?:(?:(?:%[0-9a-f][0-9a-f]|[-a-z0-9\._~\x{A0}-\x{D7FF}\x{F900}-\x{FDCF}\x{FDF0}-\x{FFEF}\x{10000}-\x{1FFFD}\x{20000}-\x{2FFFD}\x{30000}-\x{3FFFD}\x{40000}-\x{4FFFD}\x{50000}-\x{5FFFD}\x{60000}-\x{6FFFD}\x{70000}-\x{7FFFD}\x{80000}-\x{8FFFD}\x{90000}-\x{9FFFD}\x{A0000}-\x{AFFFD}\x{B0000}-\x{BFFFD}\x{C0000}-\x{CFFFD}\x{D0000}-\x{DFFFD}\x{E1000}-\x{EFFFD}!\$&'\(\)\*\+,;=:@]))+)(?:\/(?:(?:%[0-9a-f][0-9a-f]|[-a-z0-9\._~\x{A0}-\x{D7FF}\x{F900}-\x{FDCF}\x{FDF0}-\x{FFEF}\x{10000}-\x{1FFFD}\x{20000}-\x{2FFFD}\x{30000}-\x{3FFFD}\x{40000}-\x{4FFFD}\x{50000}-\x{5FFFD}\x{60000}-\x{6FFFD}\x{70000}-\x{7FFFD}\x{80000}-\x{8FFFD}\x{90000}-\x{9FFFD}\x{A0000}-\x{AFFFD}\x{B0000}-\x{BFFFD}\x{C0000}-\x{CFFFD}\x{D0000}-\x{DFFFD}\x{E1000}-\x{EFFFD}!\$&'\(\)\*\+,;=:@]))*)*|(?!(?:%[0-9a-f][0-9a-f]|[-a-z0-9\._~\x{A0}-\x{D7FF}\x{F900}-\x{FDCF}\x{FDF0}-\x{FFEF}\x{10000}-\x{1FFFD}\x{20000}-\x{2FFFD}\x{30000}-\x{3FFFD}\x{40000}-\x{4FFFD}\x{50000}-\x{5FFFD}\x{60000}-\x{6FFFD}\x{70000}-\x{7FFFD}\x{80000}-\x{8FFFD}\x{90000}-\x{9FFFD}\x{A0000}-\x{AFFFD}\x{B0000}-\x{BFFFD}\x{C0000}-\x{CFFFD}\x{D0000}-\x{DFFFD}\x{E1000}-\x{EFFFD}!\$&'\(\)\*\+,;=:@])))(?:\?(?:(?:%[0-9a-f][0-9a-f]|[-a-z0-9\._~\x{A0}-\x{D7FF}\x{F900}-\x{FDCF}\x{FDF0}-\x{FFEF}\x{10000}-\x{1FFFD}\x{20000}-\x{2FFFD}\x{30000}-\x{3FFFD}\x{40000}-\x{4FFFD}\x{50000}-\x{5FFFD}\x{60000}-\x{6FFFD}\x{70000}-\x{7FFFD}\x{80000}-\x{8FFFD}\x{90000}-\x{9FFFD}\x{A0000}-\x{AFFFD}\x{B0000}-\x{BFFFD}\x{C0000}-\x{CFFFD}\x{D0000}-\x{DFFFD}\x{E1000}-\x{EFFFD}!\$&'\(\)\*\+,;=:@])|[\x{E000}-\x{F8FF}\x{F0000}-\x{FFFFD}|\x{100000}-\x{10FFFD}\/\?])*)?(?:\#(?:(?:%[0-9a-f][0-9a-f]|[-a-z0-9\._~\x{A0}-\x{D7FF}\x{F900}-\x{FDCF}\x{FDF0}-\x{FFEF}\x{10000}-\x{1FFFD}\x{20000}-\x{2FFFD}\x{30000}-\x{3FFFD}\x{40000}-\x{4FFFD}\x{50000}-\x{5FFFD}\x{60000}-\x{6FFFD}\x{70000}-\x{7FFFD}\x{80000}-\x{8FFFD}\x{90000}-\x{9FFFD}\x{A0000}-\x{AFFFD}\x{B0000}-\x{BFFFD}\x{C0000}-\x{CFFFD}\x{D0000}-\x{DFFFD}\x{E1000}-\x{EFFFD}!\$&'\(\)\*\+,;=:@])|[\/\?])*)?$/i

Symbolic name ST.SYMB

This is actually a character string (ST) with a certain pattern.

The pattern is:

^[a-z]([a-z]|[A-Z]|[0-9]|[\-][^-])*([^-])?$

Telecommunication TEL

Example:

<telecom value="tel:+491234567890" use="H WP" capabilities="voice fax"/>

Time stamp TS

Example:

<applicationDate value="20101205"/>

Uniform Resource Identification URI

This is actually a character string with a certain pattern.

Example:

<uri value="http://x.y.org"/>

See also: [14][15].

Annex A (informative)

In informative Annex A, a description possible of sub trees reflecting OID categories for e-health related OIDs is given.

Annex A is a specific description for the registration procedures for e-health related OIDs, and includes a specification of those parts of the OID tree that are known to be used for national and for international e-health applications.

ObjectType

Type of object identified by the OID.

HL7 International makes a suggestion[16] for a structure of object types

  • .1 HL7 registered internal objects (other than organizational bodies)
  • .2 HL7 organizational bodies and groups
  • .3 External (not HL7) group functioning as a Registration Authority
  • .4 Registered externally maintained identifier systems and namespaces
  • .5 HL7 Internal Code Systems
  • .6 Registered external coding systems
  • .7 HL7 published document artifacts
  • .9 HL7 Registered conformance profiles
  • .10 HL7 Registered Templates
  • .11 HL7 defined and registered Value Sets
  • .12 HL7 Version 2.x tables
  • .13 Externally authored and curated Value Sets
  • .14 Assignment Ontology node
  • .15 Small code sets externally defined
  • .17 Non-specified type
  • .18 HL7 Version 2.8 Coding Systems
  • .19 HL7 Examples

From a policy perspective it is common practice in several healthcare related (European) OID registries [17] [18] [19] and makes sense to distinguish at least between the following types of OIDs:

  • .3 organizational bodies and groups
  • .4 identifier systems
  • .5 code systems
  • .7 documents
  • .9 conformance profiles
  • .10 templates
  • .11 value sets
  • .19 examples
  • .99 experimental

Annex B (informative)

Informative Annex B specifies the use cases of an OID registry/repository and an Object Identifier Resolution System (ORS) for e-health related OIDs based on RESTful Web Services.

Use Cases

A list of OID Registry Use Cases has been defined in order to drive metadata model requirements, and functional requirements for Registry interoperability.

U1: OID Creation where the registry owner is the RA

  • Creation of a new OID in the standard ontological structure
  • Creation of a new OID in a sub-structure

U2: OID Registration

  • Registration where the registry owner created the OID
  • Registration of an OID created elsewhere

U3: OID Withdrawal/Replacement

  • Withdraw an OID created in error with no replacement
  • Withdraw an OID created in error with specified replacement
  • Withdraw an OID registered in error with no replacement
  • Withdraw an OID registered in error with specified replacement
  • Withdraw an OID that is found to be a duplicate, with original specified

U4: OID Metadata Update/Editing

  • Permissions model
  • Distributed effort model
  • Proxies for Editors

U5: OID Information Publication

  • Web presence
  • Internet-accessible API (Web service presence)
  • Full registry output to machine-readable form
  • Full registry output to human-readable form
  • Partial registry output to machine-readable form
  • Partial registry output to human-readable form

U6: OID Information Request

  • Search for the OID of an object
  • Search for the object identified by an OID
  • Search for a list of kinds of OIDs
  • Search for a list of OID based on various sub-criteria, with and without wildcards
    • Those registered by a particular entity
    • Those associated with a type of information object
    • Those associated with implementation guides
    • Those registered during some time period
    • etc.

Basic interactions between OID registries

A set of basic interactions is developed and documented in order to facilitate the exchange of OID-related information between registries. This will include at least the following transactions:

  • Share OID list
  • Retrieve OID list

RESTful Web Servcies for an Object Identifier Resolution System

Representational state transfer (REST) is a style of software architecture for distributed hypermedia systems such as the World Wide Web. The term representational state transfer was introduced and defined in 2000 by Roy Fielding in his doctoral dissertation.[20][21]

A RESTful web service is implemented using HTTP and the principles of REST. It is a collection of resources, with four defined aspects:

  • the base URI for the web service, such as http://oid.server.org/
  • the Internet media type of the data supported by the web service, in this case either XML or HTML only.
  • the set of operations supported by the web service using HTTP methods, in this case GET only.

Simple mechanisms should be provided in order to retrieve lists of OIDs from a registry, details of a particular OID or an extract of the entire OID registry. Various formats should be supported like HTML and the original XML format.

The suggested calls should be implemented as RESTful Web Services and their parameters are stated as follows.

Resource Description GET Parameters
OIDIndex retrieves an index of all OIDs in the OID registry in HTML format

format (default, fixed): html

id (optional): an OID

language (optional): language

http://oid.server.org/OIDIndex

gets an HTML table of all OIDs in the registry with links to the details for each OID

http://oid.server.org/OIDIndex?id=1.0.3166.1.2.2

gets an HTML table of OID 1.0.3166.1.2.2 with links to the details for this OID

http://oid.server.org/OIDIndex?id=1.0.3166.1.2.2&language=de-DE

gets an HTML table of OID 1.0.3166.1.2.2 with links to the details for this OID in the German language

RetrieveOID retrieves a particular OID in the OID registry

id (required): an OID

format (optional): html or xml

language (optional): language

http://oid.server.org/RetrieveOID?id=1.0.3166.1.2.2&format=html

gets details of OID 1.0.3166.1.2.2 in HTML format

http://oid.server.org/RetrieveOID?id=1.0.3166.1.2.2&format=html&language=de-DE

gets details of OID 1.0.3166.1.2.2 in HTML format in the German language

http://oid.server.org/RetrieveOID?id=1.0.3166.1.2.2&format=xml

gets details of OID 1.0.3166.1.2.2 in XML format

GetOIDRegistry gets the entire content of the OID registry in XML format

format (default, fixed): xml

http://oid.server.org/GetOIDRegistry

gets the entire content of the OID registry in XML format

Annex C (informative): W3C schema for the XML representation

Informative Annex C references a W3C schema for the XML representation.

Bibliography

  1. ITU-T X.660 | ISO/IEC 9834-1
  2. ISO/IEC DIS 9834-1 Information technology -- Open Systems Interconnection -- Procedures for the operation of OSI Registration Authorities: General procedures and top arcs of the International Object Identifier tree
  3. ISO/NWIP/TR Health Informatics – Guidance for maintenance of Object Identifiers OID
  4. HL7 International
  5. OID repository (France Telecom-Orange)
  6. OID registry (DIMDI, Germany)
  7. Recommendation ITU-T X.680 (2008) | ISO/IEC 8824-1: 2008, Information Technology – Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1), Specification of Basic Notation, 1997
  8. Recommendation ITU-T X.667 | ISO/IEC 9834-8: Information technology – Open Systems Interconnection – Procedures for the operation of OSI Registration Authorities: Generation and registration of Universally Unique Identifiers (UUIDs) and their use as ASN.1 object identifier components
  9. http://www.oid-info.com/faq.htm#iri
  10. ISO 3166-1-alpha-2 country codes
  11. ISO 3166 - Codes for the representation of names of countries - The International Organization for Standardization, 3rd edition.
  12. ISO 639-2 Codes for the Representation of Names of Languages
  13. ISO 21090 Healthcare Datatypes (ISO/FDIS 21090:2009(E))
  14. IETF RFC 1738 - Uniform Resource Locators (URL)
  15. IETF RFC 2396 - Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax
  16. http://wiki.hl7.org/index.php?title=HL7_OID_Registry_Frequently_Asked_Questions
  17. http://www.dimdi.de/dynamic/de/ehealth/oid/verzeichnis.html OID registry Germany
  18. http://oid.refdata.ch/ OID registry Switzerland
  19. https://www.gesundheit.gv.at/OID_Frontend/ OID registry Austria
  20. Chapter 5 of Fielding's dissertation is "Representational State Transfer (REST)".
  21. "Fielding discussing the definition of the REST term"