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Integrations

Connect your lab to hospital, LIS, and EHR workflows.

Plan HL7, FHIR, SMART, REST, CSV, and spreadsheet workflows around each client system.

LIS
Excel / CSV
Google Sheets
Manual Updates
Integration-ready core

HIMS247 LabOps

Normalize operational updates into safe patient workflows and staff queues.

Patient Portal
Staff Dashboard
Notifications
Lab Ops gives endpoint

Hospital/EHR pushes orders into Lab Ops

Lab Ops provides tenant-specific inbound endpoints, API credentials, webhook signing secrets, and payload guidance so a hospital system can send orders or updates safely.

Hospital gives access

Lab Ops pulls data from a FHIR or SMART system

The hospital or EHR provides the FHIR issuer/base URL, client ID, approved scopes, and client secret where required. Lab Ops uses those credentials to read approved resources.

Both models supported

Lab Ops sends results back to a hospital

Results can be delivered to a hospital-provided FHIR, HL7, or API endpoint, or made available through a tenant-specific Lab Ops result API/webhook.

Compatible EHRs only

SMART on FHIR for compatible EHRs

SMART on FHIR is supported where the EHR exposes compatible FHIR APIs, app registration, launch URLs, callback URLs, and approved read scopes.

Gateway-ready

HL7 v2 for traditional hospital systems

For older LIS/HIS environments, HL7 v2 can be mapped through integration gateways and project-specific message profiles such as orders and results.

Phased rollout

CSV, spreadsheet, and REST API fallback

Smaller labs can start with structured imports, exports, simple APIs, and staff review before investing in deeper system-to-system automation.

Credential handoff

Sometimes Lab Ops gives the API. Sometimes the hospital gives the EHR access.

The integration page should guide each tenant by direction: receive orders, pull approved data, or send results back. That avoids confusion during hospital IT onboarding.

What Lab Ops gives the hospital

Launch URL, callback URL, tenant API endpoint, webhook endpoint, API credentials, signing secret, data format documentation, and revocation controls.

What the hospital/EHR gives Lab Ops

FHIR base URL or issuer, client ID, client secret when required, approved scopes, test patient context, destination endpoint, and sandbox/production rules.

What must be agreed before go-live

Direction of data flow, resource/message mapping, patient data policy, audit requirements, testing window, error handling, support owner, and security approval.

Standards-ready, not magic

SMART/FHIR works where the client system supports it.

A SMART launcher test proves the app can handle the launch, authorization, callback, and read-only FHIR summary flow. Real hospital rollout still depends on that EHR's approved scopes, credentials, APIs, and IT review.

SMART on FHIR-ready for compatible EHR launch and authorization flows

FHIR REST readiness for Patient, ServiceRequest, Observation, DiagnosticReport, and related resources

HL7 v2 readiness for traditional order/result messaging where an integration gateway is available

Tenant-specific credentials instead of one global API key across hospitals

Read-only sandbox testing before production write or result-delivery workflows

CSV and REST API options for labs that are not ready for full EHR/LIS integration

Book a Lab Workflow Audit

We review your patient communication, result-status process, home collection flow, staff tasks, and reporting bottlenecks. Then we show where automation can save time safely.

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