eCare Plan Resources and Publications
All products are open-source and freely available.
eCare Plan Apps
eCare Plans support seamless care coordination, communication, and collaboration among members of the care team (patients, caregivers, and healthcare professionals) to address the full spectrum of a patient’s needs across home-, community-, clinic-, and research-based settings. The MCC eCare Plan project created and pilot-tested two SMART®-on-FHIR (Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources) apps, one for providers (“eCarePlanner”) and one for patients/caregivers (“MyCarePlanner”), that integrate with EHRs and other available FHIR servers to pull, share, collect, and display key patient data to help with person-centered care planning.
- For patients/caregivers: MyCarePlanner* | For clinicians: eCarePlanner
- Review a live demo of the MyCarePlanner app.
*U.S. Department of Health and Human Services 2015 Stakeholder Panel | Baker, et al. Making the Comprehensive Shared Care Plan a Reality. NEJM Catalyst. 2016.
eCare Plan Implementation Guide and Plain Language Summary
HL7, or Health Level Seven International, creates standards to allow information to be shared between hospitals, doctors’ offices, and laboratories. The HL7 FHIR MCC eCare Plan implementation guide defines FHIR R4 profiles, structures, extensions, transactions, and value sets needed to represent, query for, and exchange care plan information. This initial version focuses on chronic kidney disease, type 2 diabetes mellitus, common cardiovascular diseases (hypertension, ischemic heart disease, and heart failure), chronic pain, and Long COVID.
The MCC eCare Plan implementation guide was balloted as a standard for trial use in the September 2023 ballot cycle and is currently undergoing reconciliation. The implementation guide includes a new (experimental) section with a Plain Language Summary—the first of its kind that may become standard in future HL7 FHIR implementation guides.
Partnering With HL7
The standards development components of the project were developed together with HL7. The project is sponsored by the Patient Care Work Group, and co-sponsored by the Clinical Decision Support Work Group and the Learning Health System Work Group. Learn more about our activities with HL7 on the HL7 MCC eCare Plan page.
Data Elements and Value Sets
The MCC eCare Plan Project has developed 1100+ data elements with corresponding value sets.
To help with standardized transfer of health data across various settings for people with chronic kidney disease, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, chronic pain, and/or Long COVID, we worked with patients, caregivers, clinicians, researchers, and informaticians to identify important pieces of information to include in the care plan and built corresponding value sets using common clinical terminologies such as LOINC, SNOMED-CT, and ICD-10. The value sets include chronic conditions, clinical tests, goals, laboratory results, medications, social determinant of health assessments, procedures, and symptoms relevant to the five use case conditions. The value sets are published in the National Library of Medicine’s Value Set Authority Center under the “HL7 Patient Care WG Steward” and available from the value set library in our HL7 FHIR implementation guide.
Pilot Testing Lessons Learned (Round 1)
The Implementation of an eCare Plan for People With MCC Final Report documents the results from single site implementation of the SMART on FHIR app, including lessons learned and recommended app updates. Testing focused on usability and was conducted in two phases: the first phase in the test environment at Oregon Health & Science University, with clinicians accessing test patient data using each eCare Plan app, and the second in the production environment, with patients accessing their own data in the MyCarePlanner app. During testing, the eCare Plan apps enabled standards-based sharing of some data and revealed areas for additional work, demonstrating the feasibility of a solution for electronic shared care planning and care coordination for patients with MCC.
Results from Round 2 multisite, real-world implementation and usability testing are anticipated in early 2025.
Publications
Establishing Data Elements and Exchange Standards to Support Long COVID Healthcare and Research.
Mobile Health Applications, Family Caregivers, and Care Planning: A Scoping Review.
Assessing Progress Toward the Vision of a Comprehensive, Shared Electronic Care Plan: Scoping Review.