When an NHI number is not known, a match by demographics can be used to find the patient record. For the patient match service, the name and birthdate are required at a minimum. Other demographics such as gender, birthplace and address can be used to improve the match results.
The NHI search uses a probabilistic search and returns results in order of their match score with the highest scoring result returned as the first in the bundle. The more match criteria provided, in as complete a form as is known, the more accurate the results returned will be. It is better to enter the complete name even if spelling is not accurate, than entering just part of the name.
Results are scored on the following basis:
A score is assigned to each record that represents how closely it matches the match parameters
Each match parameter (e.g., Surname, year of birth, month of birth etc) is assigned a score, and weighted for importance. The sum of the individual scores makes up the overall score.
The weightings vary based on a tuning process, with names weighted approximately twice as highly as a date of birth.
Other notes on matches:
All names including active and inactive names (names that have previously been used) are considered by the match.
Phonetic similarities are considered (spellings and variations that sound the same).
The match ignores differences between upper and lower case, punctuation, diacritics and dashes.
The popularity of a name will impact the score e.g., a match on Jack will score lower than a match on Edwin because there are more people in the index named Jack than Edwin.
When names are in the same order as the match criteria, they will score slightly better than when the order is different e.g. Jane Mary Smith vs. Mary Jane Smith
Names with similar spelling are considered for scoring. Minor spelling mistakes are catered for. E.g. If Sasha is being searched for then Sahsa would get some score and so would Sarah but Raewyn would not.”
Note to testers:
Patient $Match does not enable searching in the same way that Patient Search does. You cannot expect results like a usual string search would provide for a search on patient name. The NHI search is tuned and tested specifically for the kinds of names typically found in the NZ population, the test data you are using is unlikely to reflect the make up of names in the production NHI. Our compliance tests for $Match Patient will indicate what NHI should be the highest scoring result and the score you should expect if you use the input criteria as indicated in the test.
Match Patient processing steps:
The user supplies patient details to be be matched against the NHI patient records
The integrating application sends an HTTP Post request (E.g. Post<Endpoint>/Patient/$match) using the $match operation to the NHI with 'In Parameters' (A Patient resource, onlyCertainMatches set to False, and a count (optional)).
The request is validated - ALT: Validation failure. Operation Outcome resource returned
The matching patients are retrieved from the NHI.
The response containing a bundle of matching patient resources is returned to the integrating application - ALT: Empty bundle returned
The integrating application displays the matching patients to the user.
In Parameters
**A match patient request is actioned by submitting a Parameters resource**
Parameter name
Parameter type
Mandatory / Optional
Description
resource
patient
Mandatory
The match patient operation uses the following attributes:
name
birthdate
gender
Address is not currently supported in match - this will be included in a future release
Attributes included in the match request and not used by the operation will be silently ignored
onlyCertainMatches
boolean
Mandatory
Must be set to false
count
valueInteger
Optional
The maximum number of records to return. Note that interators should be careful when using this, as it may prevent probable - and valid - matches from being returned
The NHI does a search using supplied Patient demographics
A bundle of patient records that represent possible matches is returned
Each record will have a match score from 40 (least likely) - 140 (most likely)
Scores below 40 are not returned.
The highest scoring records are returned first in the bundle
If no records meet the match threshold, an empty bundle will be returned
Note: To be more FHIR compliant this will be changed to return:
A search score most likely (1) to least likely (0)
A "match-grade": (Certain Match / Possible Match)
Privcy requirements
Te Whatu Ora does not require a Get to be done after a match request.
Te Whatu Ora will log details of each NHI returned by a $match operation so that any privacy requests from people wanting to know which organisations and users have retrieved their NHI record, can be responded to.
Integrating systems should also ensure they have sufficient logging in place to respond to similar requests.
birthdate (this can be a partial birthdate i.e. year only)
Minimum details to be presented by the integrator in the user interface to allow for adequate confirmation of identity (if present on the patient record):
preferred name (given name, other given names and family name).