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OHIN

OHin is an acronym used in information technology and informatics to denote a network or system designed to share information across organizational boundaries in an open and interoperable way. The term does not have a single universally accepted definition; it is used in different sectors to describe both generic open information networks and domain-specific infrastructures.

In the health sector, OHIN most often refers to the Oregon Health Information Network, a statewide health

Beyond health, OHin has appeared in academic and policy contexts as a placeholder name for open information

Overall, OHin serves as a flexible label for systems dedicated to interoperable information exchange across boundaries,

Related topics include health information exchange, interoperable standards, HIPAA, HL7 and FHIR.

information
exchange
in
the
United
States.
OHIN
connects
hospitals,
clinics,
laboratories,
and
public
health
agencies
to
enable
secure
exchange
of
patient
data,
improve
care
coordination,
and
support
public
health
reporting.
Implementations
typically
rely
on
privacy
and
security
controls
to
comply
with
HIPAA
and
data-use
agreements,
and
adopt
interoperability
standards
such
as
HL7,
FHIR,
and
CCDs
to
facilitate
data
sharing.
networks,
including
Open
Health
Information
Network
or
Open
Humanities
Information
Network.
In
fiction
and
theoretical
discourse,
OHin
can
denote
organizations
or
protocols
centered
on
openness,
data
sharing,
and
cross-organizational
governance.
with
real-world
emphasis
in
health
information
exchanges
and
broader
applications
in
information
governance
and
open-data
discourse.