Gail Kalbfleisch: Well there’s lots of lessons learned I guess we could go on in and not to belabor the point on connect or move to one of our other programs we’re working on initiatives. It’s the Federal Health Information Model, and this model is actually used to take all of that information and all of that data that we talked about earlier for interrupt ability and we understand that the various systems and the various organizations actually use a slightly different language is what we say.
JIm Flyzik: Okay.
Gail Kalbfleisch: So that information and that data does not always -- is not always easily translatable to the next item that it goes to. So what the Federal Health Information Model does is it actually identifies how can we map one piece of information to another piece of information so that we know that we’re talking about the same thing.
JIm Flyzik: Yeah, kind of like harmonizing the data so that people talk about the same information the same way.
Gail Kalbfleisch: It is absolutely the harmonization of data. It’s not only the harmonization, the content of the information, the terminologies and the value sets that are used.
JIm Flyzik: Okay.
Gail Kalbfleisch: And that’s one of the -- like we said before, that’s one of the partners main priority is want to make sure that when we’re exchanging information we’re exchanging the right information in the right way.
JIm Flyzik: That’s an excellent point.
00:01:09 END OF AUDIO
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