Grahame Grieve B.Sc. MAACB FACHI Grahame Grieve specializes in healthcare interoperability, balancing clinical, management and business perspectives with a deep technical knowledge and capability. Grahame works with many organizations to provide leadership with regard to product development, clinical safety, integration architecture, and standards implementation and development. Grahame has also conceived, developed and sold interoperability and clinical document solutions and products. In addition, Grahame is involved in a number of open source industry consortiums. Grahame is deeply involved in the healthcare standards development process, principally at HL7. Over an eight year period he has used committee chair positions and editorship of key structural standards to lead convergence between US, international and European standards organizations. For this work he was awarded the HISA Don Watson Award for Effectiveness in Health Informatics in 2009. Grahame’s current focus is to define a new more practical interoperability solution called FHIR. Grahame lives in Melbourne, Australia, with his wife and two daughters. Grahame sometimes plays the piano and didgeridoo, and very occasionally gets to go kayak fishing. Grahame is a citizen of both Australia and the United Kingdom, and can be contacted Skills & Expertise
OUTCOMES
Standards Development, Implementation & Adoption
Enterprise, Architecture & Governance
Open Source & Tool Development, Interoperability Toolkits
STANDARDS
Internationally recognised expert, committee chair, and editor of several key standards – covering v2, v3, and CDA + implemented many. Principal architect for FHIR (http://hl7.org/fhir)
Architect & Lead for open source webservices toolkit
DEVELOPMENT TOOLS
Deep experience for many years in all contexts of use
Implemented Eclipse Instance Editor for OHT
Industry Roles Project Lead & Lead Committer, Eclipse
Project Lead– Webservices Toolkit 1999+ &Committer (open source Delphi)
Member: eHealth Industry Clinical Safety and Security Committee Expert Speaker: Clinical Safety, HL7 subjects, Delphi Programming
MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA, 02/2011 TO PRESENT
Integration and Interoperability consulting, including:
Clinical Document Expert for Australian National Program
Implementation and Adoption for many vendors
MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA, 02/1997 TO 12/2010
Technical Leadership, Consulting, Standards Development, Industry
Liason, Interoperability Projects, Business Direction
Administration and management responsibilities for all Kestral
development (hiring+firing, programming culture & policies) + ISO 9001
Responsible for the development, sales, implementation and ongoing support of clinical portals, HL7 interface engine , clinical documents, and other communications solutions (ongoing to 2010)
MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA, 06/1990 TO 02/1997
Clinical Researcher Ph.D. Thesis: “Modifications of LDL and Lp(a) in Diabetes Mellitus”
Laboratory Scientist (Diagnostics & Research)
QUALIFICATIONS
Auckland University, NZ. Major: Biochemistry & Cell Biology
Publications / Prizes MAACB examiner’s prize (1992)
“Gemfibrozil treatment increases low-density lipoprotein particle size in Type 2 diabetes
mellitus but does not alter in vitro oxidizability”,
“A Cross-Sectional Study of the Effects of Type 2 Diabetes and Other Cardiovascular Risk
Factors on Structure and Function of Nonstenotic Arteries of the Lower Limb
“Factors influencing Lp[a]- particle size as determined by gradient gel electrophoresis
“Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources”
[Or, The ethical implications of SQL.]The figure explains how my work in statistical genetics is all possible. It is whata genetics lab looks like. That’s a work bench, like the ones upon which thousandsof pipettes have squirted millions of liters of fluid in the past. But you can see that itis now taken up by a big blue box, which hooks up to a PC. Some of these big boxesuse a parallel port
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