@Article{info:doi/10.2196/51270, author="Heryawan, Lukman and Mori, Yukiko and Yamamoto, Goshiro and Kume, Naoto and Lazuardi, Lutfan and Fuad, Anis and Kuroda, Tomohiro", title="Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR)--Based Interoperability Design in Indonesia: Content Analysis of Developer Hub's Social Networking Service", journal="JMIR Form Res", year="2025", month="Apr", day="21", volume="9", pages="e51270", keywords="interoperability; Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR); COVID-19; Satusehat; Indonesia; interoperability design; social networking; health information; content analysis; private clinic", abstract="Background: Interoperability in health care is a critical aspect for the exchange of health information. The Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) framework has become widely adopted to provide interoperable data exchange in the health care industry. The COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated the significance of interoperable data in tracking patients who have contracted the virus and keeping track of the vaccinated population. Indonesia is one of the many countries that have implemented interoperable data systems to track patients with COVID-19, and it has aspirations to expand the system to other use cases, particularly in the primary health care setting. The primary health care providers in Indonesia include Puskesmas (community health centers) and private clinics. Objective: To promote interoperable health data exchange in the primary health care sector, the Indonesian government has launched the Satusehat project. The goal of the Satusehat platform is to make health data in Indonesia interoperable and exchangeable between health care organizations, particularly Puskesmas and private clinics. Methods: For a successful implementation of the Satusehat platform in Puskesmas and private clinics, it is crucial to understand the challenges that may arise. This study analyzed the pain points of the Satusehat platform based on a content analysis of the Satusehat Social Networking Service Telegram group messages. The study revealed the pain points and suggested existing approaches to address them, which can be used as a proposed design of interoperability for Puskesmas and private clinics, making it easier for these organizations to adopt the Satusehat platform. Results: The pain points identified in this study include issues with the FHIR server, problems with FHIR profile selection, and the mapping of electronic medical record data into standardized data, such as mapping into the Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine Clinical Terminology. The results show that the value of the mapping issue is 37, profile issue 9, and server issue 61. Among the 3 categories, server issues had the highest population, followed by mapping issues and then profile issues. To address these issues, the study proposed practical approaches, including a federated architecture for the FHIR server instead of a centralized architecture, an FHIR writer and FHIR viewer system inspired by the Standardized Structured Medical Record Information eXchange system in Japan, and an FHIR conversion framework that integrates with our FHIR writer and FHIR viewer system. Conclusions: These proposed solutions can help resolve the pain points identified in the study and help the advancement of the Satusehat platform implementation in Puskesmas and private clinics in Indonesia. We believed that the proposed solutions have potential to be adopted to other countries with similar issues when conducting nationwide project in health care interoperability design. ", issn="2561-326X", doi="10.2196/51270", url="https://formative.jmir.org/2025/1/e51270", url="https://doi.org/10.2196/51270" }