--
Sophia, benefit is sort of a loaded term in human services. Service event doesn't necessarily entail benefit. An example non-benefit service event could be a "homeless outreach" which may not really benefit the homeless person initially in any real way, but may lead to benefits as the outreach leads to an intake assessment
To expand upon what Dale
In current practice, when a 2-1-1 makes "warm transfer" of referral data to the referred to agency, it does so in the format that agency
<Eric's boring story time> When 2-1-1 Tampa Bay Cares makes a warm transfer of referral data to the County Behavioral Healthcare Network, it uses the data protocols of healthcare, since that's what their network's vendor supports (RHIO software). So that means
Likewise, if they refer to the state's health and human services entitlement programs, the referral would have to be in the format that agency dictates, which is being specified by NIEM
But I see one short term problem in that NIEM Human Service's framework (NHSIA) may not meet all of 2-1-1's or other community (non HHS) requirements, and incorporating our extensions
I'm hoping to also convince NIEM Human Services that a more community-centric (focusing on 2-1-1s, HUD HMIS, DOL-ETA, etc.) sister effort will be in their best interests also, and would merge gradually with their main domain, as they are ready.
A third alternative, which is the current one we are embarking on, I think, is to make an Open 2-1-1 with a unique model and set of data types specific to the domain of 2-1-1. Human services agencies would have to possess flexible logical models to support the concepts and structures of each silo they work with, and Open 2-1-1 would be added to the list of supported silos.
-Eric
I would concur with Sophia. Greg, your original notion of a ‘community resources data commons’ better encompasses what is being discussed because it does have a broader scope than 2-1-1. Any 2-1-1, whether Open or not, could certainly benefit from the data commons.
Dale
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Greg,
If I may start at the end and then work back to the beginning, I agree, OpenReferral does avoid the conflation with 2-1-1. However, it seems like our primary focus has been on which taxonomy/XSD should be used to map the services. As such, have we not been spending most of our time talking about OpenServicesTaxonomy? The information that would be captured by this taxonomy could then be used by any entity (Open211 or otherwise) for different purposes. Apologies for the digression but I just felt a need to clarify purpose.
Thanks,
Dale
From: openinfoa...@googlegroups.com [mailto:openinfoa...@googlegroups.com]
On Behalf Of Greg Bloom
Sent: Monday, November 18, 2013 8:25 AM
To: Eric Jahn
Cc: openinfoa...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Ontological question: | Services <> Benefits |
Okay. This thread had a lot to sift through. Here's the tl;dr ('too long didn't read' version): How about the name OpenReferral as an alternative to (and/or complementary umbrella for) Open211?
From the data I examined in Michigan, a client is referred for A, and ends up receiving A, B, and C because the assessment at the agency level uncovered additional needs. Sometimes a caller was referred for A, but actually needed D provided through a different agency. That pass off between those two agencies was unknown to 211. In sum, the broader purposes seems to be the services taxonomy of which referrals are one potential use.
Stated otherwise, today we have a conflated view of 211 as a provider of both referrals AND the taxonomy. It seems to me the purpose of the project is to apply new technologies to the taxonomy such that it can be used for referrals and other uses. Even the use of the term "referral" has a very specific meaning according to the AIRS Standards: http://www.airs.org/files/public/AIRS_StandardsVersion5_2.pdf
I know I'm splitting semantic hairs, but I think it may help explain some of the pushback you might experience from time to time.
Greg, just wanted to quickly respond to your comments/questions (included below). Thanks for creating the Hackpad entry. I'll try to review it soon. Checking alignment between NIEM's logical model and CfA's does seem like the next move, and shouldn't take more than a few hours, in my opinion. Also, I think mapping AIRS schema elements to NIEM would take maybe 10 hours to document in a spreadsheet. It could take fewer hours, if there is already decent alignment, and we don't have to define extended elements, based on existing ones. We could use more hours later to more fully document the API in an IEPD (Information Exchange Package Document) we'd submit to the NIEM repository.
Also, OpenReferral sounds good, since it makes sense and describes unambiguously what we are working on. Of course, it would require a taxonomy to be used within it (or allow for use of different taxonomies).
-Eric
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Re: http://ontolog.cim3.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?ConferenceCall_2014_01_16
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