Skip to main content

Python library to simplify working with FHIR servers and resources.

Project description

Header

CI codecov Code style: black Maintainability PyPI - Downloads PyPI

Python library for interacting with HL7 FHIR servers and resources. Resource validation and parsing powered by pydantic and the fhir.resources library. Provides a simple interface for synchronous and asynchronous CRUD operations for resources and bundles, as well as resource transfer between servers. Datascience features include flattening of resources and bundles into tabular format (pandas dataframes) and plotting methods for resources and bundles can optionally be included with the ds extra.

Check out the documentation for more information and a detailed user guide.

Table of Contents

Features

  • Create, Read, Update, Delete resources using a FHIR server's REST API
  • Transfer resources between servers while maintaining referential integrity using server-given IDs
  • Bundle creation, validation and data management on a FHIR server via the REST API
  • Supports Hapi, Blaze and IBM FHIR servers
  • CSV serialization of query results
  • Synthetic data generation and

Installation

Install the package using pip:

pip install fhir-kindling --user

Extras (optional)

Fhir kindling can be used with the following extras:

  • ds for data science related features, such as flattening of resources into a tabular format
pip install fhir-kindling[ds] --user

Usage

Connecting to a FHIR server

from fhir_kindling import FhirServer

# Connect with basic auth 
basic_auth_server = FhirServer("https://fhir.server/fhir", username="admin", password="admin")
# Connect with static token
token_server = FhirServer("https://fhir.server/fhir", token="your_token")

# Connect using oauth2/oidc
oidc_server = FhirServer("https://fhir.server/fhir", client_id="client_id", client_secret="secret",
                         oidc_provider_url="url")

# Print the server's capability statement
print(basic_auth_server.capabilities)

Query resources from the server

Basic resource query

from fhir_kindling import FhirServer
from fhir.resources.patient import Patient

# Connect using oauth2/oidc
oidc_server = FhirServer("https://fhir.server/fhir", client_id="client_id", client_secret="secret",
                         oidc_provider_url="url")

# query all patients on the server
query = oidc_server.query(Patient, output_format="json").all()
print(query.response)

# Query resources based on name of resource
query = oidc_server.query("Patient", output_format="json").all()
print(query.response)

Query with filters

Filtering the targeted resource is done using the where method on the query object. The filter is created by defining the target field, the comparison operator and the value to compare.

from fhir_kindling import FhirServer

server = FhirServer(api_address="https://fhir.server/fhir")

query = server.query("Patient").where(field="birthDate", operator="gt", value="1980").all()

Including related resources in the query

Resources that reference or are referenced by resources targeted by the query can be included in the response using the include method on the query object.

# server initialization omitted
# get the patients along with the queried conditions
query_patient_condition = server.query("Condition").include(resource="Condition", reference_param="subject").all()

# get the conditions for a patient
query_patient_condition = server.query("Patient")
query_patient_condition = query_patient_condition.include(resource="Condition", reference_param="subject", reverse=True)
response = query_patient_condition.all()

Query resources by reference

If you know the id and resource type of the resource you want to query, you can use the get method for a single reference for a list of references use get_many. The passed references should follow the format of <resource_type>/<id>.

# server initialization omitted
patient = server.get("Patient/123")

patients = server.get_many(["Patient/123", "Patient/456"])

Add resources to the server

Resources can be added to the server using the add method on the server object. Lists of resources can be added using 'add_all'.

from fhir_kindling import FhirServer
from fhir.resources.patient import Patient

# Connect to the server
server = FhirServer(api_address="https://fhir.server/fhir")

# add a single resource
patient = Patient(name=[{"family": "Smith", "given": ["John"]}])
response = server.add(patient)

# add multiple resources
patients = [Patient(name=[{"family": f"Smith_{i}", "given": ["John"]}]) for i in range(10)]
response = server.add_all(patients)

Deleting/Updating resources

Resources can be deleted from the server using the delete method on the server object, it takes as input either references to the resources or the resources itself.
Similarly the update method can be used to update the resources on the server, by passing a list of updated resources.

from fhir_kindling import FhirServer
from fhir.resources.patient import Patient

# Connect to the server
server = FhirServer(api_address="https://fhir.server/fhir")

# add some patients
patients = [Patient(name=[{"family": f"Smith_{i}", "given": ["John"]}]) for i in range(10)]
response = server.add_all(patients)

# change the name of the patients
for patient in response.resources:
    patient.name[0].given[0] = "Jane"

# update the patients on the server
updated_patients = server.update(resources=response.resources)

# delete based on reference
server.delete(references=response.references[:5])
# delete based on resources
server.delete(resources=response.resources[5:])

Transfer resources between servers

Transferring resources between servers is done using the transfer method on the server object. Using this method server assigned ids are used for transfer and referential integrity is maintained.
This method will also attempt to get all the resources that are referenced by the resources being transferred from the origin server and transfer them to the destination server as well.

from fhir_kindling import FhirServer

# initialize the two servers
server_1 = FhirServer(api_address="https://fhir.server/fhir")
server_2 = FhirServer(api_address="https://fhir.server/fhir")

# query some resources from server 1
conditions = server_1.query("Condition").limit(10)
# transfer the resources to server 2
response = server_1.transfer(server_2, resources=conditions.resources)

Performance

This library performs request at least 1.5 times faster than other popular python FHIR libraries. See Benchmarks for a more detailed description of the benchmarks. Query Results

Contributing

Contributions are very welcome and greatly appreciated! If you want to contribute to this project, please fork the repository and make changes as you'd like. Pull requests are warmly welcome and credit will always be given.

Development

To set up your environment to develop this package make sure you have poetry installed and run the following commands:

Install the dependencies:

poetry install --with dev --all-extras

Install pre-commit hooks:

poetry run pre-commit install

Tests

To run the full test suit you need access to two FHIR servers (the second one is used for transfer tests). You can spin up two servers (one HAPI and one Blaze FHIR) using the compose file in the testing directory.

cd testing
docker compose up

The servers will be available at http://localhost:9090/fhir and http://localhost:9091/fhir respectively. And the test should be configured to use them via the environment variables FHIR_API_URL and TRANSFER_SERVER_URL respectively.

Run the tests:

poetry run pytest

Credits

This package was created with Cookiecutter and the audreyr/cookiecutter-pypackage project template.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

fhir_kindling-1.0.1.tar.gz (66.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

fhir_kindling-1.0.1-py3-none-any.whl (80.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file fhir_kindling-1.0.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: fhir_kindling-1.0.1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 66.6 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.4.2 CPython/3.10.6 Linux/5.15.90.1-microsoft-standard-WSL2

File hashes

Hashes for fhir_kindling-1.0.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 cfa1a6b76a7739498719852f5c6ebc65411503b23c4c229da55af33ae7ddb74f
MD5 5face3a574f8e075e47c444600cbdb06
BLAKE2b-256 6690de9a4a0d8efc80a86fc7fa1174a64425b3982591b3c7d5adbe817a30ab34

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file fhir_kindling-1.0.1-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: fhir_kindling-1.0.1-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 80.9 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.4.2 CPython/3.10.6 Linux/5.15.90.1-microsoft-standard-WSL2

File hashes

Hashes for fhir_kindling-1.0.1-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 e61a9e4dcbf3b17fc588157c8856dadc561c6ceda3a9895ffa093de3a8c5adcb
MD5 857b0fa81bf90fafa1aa1849d0477933
BLAKE2b-256 a7aeb98aa306e61fd2ebf8c78750eb3e6b6475a5d592103929f9c76a7c9228d1

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page