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IHE Cardiology <name of Profile>. <editors> <date> <rev>. <name of profile> Problem Statement. <Brief description of the integration problem in one or two paragraphs, from user perspective, derived from Profile Proposal.
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IHE Cardiology<name of Profile> <editors> <date> <rev>
<name of profile> Problem Statement • <Brief description of the integration problem in one or two paragraphs, from user perspective, derived from Profile Proposal. • <If the reader reads nothing else, this intro should convey the gestalt of the problem and its scope. Think of it as the “elevator pitch” for the Profile (you are in an elevator with the Donald – you have 43 floors to pitch the concept) IHE Cardiology
<name of profile> Diagram Actor 3 Actor 4 Transaction B Transaction C Actor 2 Transaction D Transaction A Transaction E Actor 5 Actor 1 IHE Cardiology
Actors • <Actor name> • Same as in current Cardiology TF 1:2.3 • Or: Same as <actor> in <x> TF • Or: new actor definition • <Actor 2> • … IHE Cardiology
Transactions • <Transaction name> • Same as in current Cardiology TF 1:2.4 • Or: Same as <transaction> in <x> TF • Or: Derived from <transaction> in <x> TF • Or: new transaction definition • <Standard used> • <Specializations or restrictions> • <Transaction 2> • … IHE Cardiology
<name of profile> Scenario • <One or more realistic scenarios written in a bulleted style that illuminate how this profile treats the users integration problem. This section is the mental glue that takes the reader from the integration problem view and connects the dots to a systems view of actors and transactions. > IHE Cardiology
In Scope / Out of Scope • <Brief scoping statement describing the integration problem boundary. Ideally you want the reader to be able to read this and be capable of judging what is in or out of scope. Note: list functionality especially at borders of what is included/excluded – i.e., included features that could reasonably be descoped by the Technical Committee, or excluded fetures that could be included IHE Cardiology
Phased Approach • <If a phased approach would make sense indicate some logical phases. This may be because standards are evolving, because the problem is too big to solve at once, or because there are unknowns that won’t be resolved soon. > IHE Cardiology
Open Issues IHE Cardiology