Released March 2023. Recommended release.
- FHIR Mapping Language (FML) support.
- Swagger support.
- Support for all terminology operations.
- Enhaced support for external terminology.
- Support for FHIR R5 (5.0.0) specification
References: upTIS (Master Patient Index) in Estonia, TermX (open-source terminology and knowledge sharing platform)
Released January 2022.
- Documentation moved to the Wiki.
- Improved performance
- Increased conformance of FHIR R4 specification to 100%
- Added support for FHIR R4 specification.
- Removed OSGI and Karaf
- Rewritten to support a microservice architecture
- Moved from GitHub to GitLab
- Rebranding from Blaze to KeFHIR (because too many Blaze servers)
References: upTIS (Questionnaires, Patient Register) in Estonia, IT department of MoH in Uzbekistan
Numerations of the KeFHIR versions restarted from 4.1.0.
Released June 2019. Supported.
- HL7 CDA <-> HL7 FHIR adapters
- Consent validation
- Integration with Keycloak
- Added support for FHIR R4 specification.
References: e-Prescription in Germany and upTIS (Andmevaatur) in Estonia
Released September 2017. In development until May 2019.
- Support for Ethereum blockchain for the proof of data integrity.
- ETL adapter for data copying to Business Intelligence.
- Validators for an e-Prescription solution.
- Support for SAML and CAS5.
- Added support for FHIR R3 specification.
- Redesigned architecture of the interceptors.
- Docker support.
References: e-Prescription in UAE
Released March 2016. In development until December 2019.
- Added BigData support - Hadoop store and search with Apache Phoenix.
- Added support for FHIR R2 specification.
- Removed support of Fuse ESB and Oracle.
- Added support of OAuth2 and PostgreSQL.
- Rebranding from SpitFHIR to Blaze.
References: PHR in Estonia, PoC for KELA Finland
Released January 2014. In development until December 2017.
- Implementation of FHIR 0.0.82 specification.
- Based on Fuse ESB, OSGI, Karaf, Oauth 1 and Oracle
References: NHS in Lithuania