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Enterprise Information Sharing Approach & Potential

Enterprise Information Sharing Approach & Potential. Where HHS Is Today. Where HHS Is Going. Strategy. Business. Investment. Data/Databases. Systems/Services. Technology. Workforce. Facilities. Security & Privacy. Performance. Interoperability Using HHS's EA Framework. HHS

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Enterprise Information Sharing Approach & Potential

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  1. Enterprise Information Sharing Approach & Potential

  2. Where HHS Is Today 2

  3. Where HHS Is Going 3

  4. Strategy Business Investment Data/Databases Systems/Services Technology Workforce Facilities Security & Privacy Performance Interoperability Using HHS's EA Framework HHS Mission • Strategy – identify the strategic goals and objectives for HHS mission • Business – determine what essential business activities are needed to achieve the goals and objectives. • Performance – identify measurement indicators to measure performance at all levels of the enterprise • Investment – represents the financial aspect of an enterprise investment. It includes concepts that allow the EA information to be reconciled with investment and project control information. • Data – determine what data will be needed to support the business activities, and where it can be obtained. • Systems/Services – identify any needed systems and/or services that will provide the capabilities needed to support the above business activities and how they will be made available • Technology – identify the technology to be used in building the system services • Workforce – identify the roles and key positions needed to support the above business activities • Facilities – identify the facilities needed to support the business activities above. • Security/Privacy– identify the security controls that are to be in place at each layer and how they will be implemented 4

  5. Strategy Business Investment Data/Databases Systems/Services Technology Workforce Facilities Security & Privacy Performance Interoperability Using HHS's EA Framework HHS Mission • Strategy – identify the strategic goals and objectives for HHS mission • Business – determine what essential business activities are needed to achieve the goals and objectives. • Performance – identify measurement indicators to measure performance at all levels of the enterprise • Investment – represents the financial aspect of an enterprise investment. It includes concepts that allow the EA information to be reconciled with investment and project control information. • Data – determine what data will be needed to support the business activities, and where it can be obtained. • Systems/Services – identify any needed systems and/or services that will provide the capabilities needed to support the above business activities and how they will be made available • Technology – identify the technology to be used in building the system services • Workforce – identify the roles and key positions needed to support the above business activities • Facilities – identify the facilities needed to support the business activities above. • Security/Privacy – identify the security controls that are to be in place at each layer and how they will be implemented 5

  6. Simplified Services Perspective SERV I CES SERV I CES Systems Environment #1 Security Transport Security Systems Environment #2 6

  7. Data Exchange Opportunity Federal Health Architecture HHS Non-Mission Information HHS Non-Health Information HHS Administrative Information 7

  8. HHS Information Sharing Fabric 8

  9. Driving Information Sharing Principles • High Cohesion – services are associated with data exchange packages incrementally, as needed, to provide business services required by HHS and its partners • Low Coupling – component services are complete and do not require other data or services to fulfill their specific function  EISS is a set of infrastructure services that support the secure exchange of information among its subscribers. EISS is information agnostic 9

  10. Strategy Business Investments Data/Databases Security System/Services Technology Facilities Workforce Strategy Strategy Stakeholders Stakeholders Business Business Data/Databases Data Security Security CDC CMS FDA IHS NIH AHRQ etc. Applications Applications DHHS OPDIV OPDIV OPDIV OPDIV OPDIV OPDIV OPDIV Technology Technology Enterprise Wide Information Sharing Services Facilities Facilities Workforce Workforce Common Solution Common Solution Common Solution UniqueSolution UniqueSolution UniqueSolution UniqueSolution UniqueSolution UniqueSolution UniqueSolution UniqueSolution INFRASTRUCTURE HHS Enterprise Shared Services Optimized Services and Systems Citizens & Partners HHS Workforce 10

  11. Federal Health Architecture Implications 11

  12. EISS Conceptual Diagram 12

  13. Questions? John Teeter HHS Chief Enterprise Architect Phone: 202-690-6162 Email: John.teeter@hhs.gov Website: http://www.hhs.gov/ocio/ea

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