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@ohs-foundation

OHS Software Foundation Community

This is the technical home for the OHS Software Foundation (a Linux Foundation project currently under formation)
OHS Software Foundation

A Linux Foundation project · Built on open standards for advancing next-gen global digital health

Intro · Start Here · Get Involved · Community · History

What is the OHS-SF?

The OHS Software Foundation builds and maintains open, reusable building blocks for digital health — standards-based libraries, SDKs, and reference tooling that make it dramatically easier to build interoperable, AI-ready solutions.

The idea is simple: stop rebuilding the same plumbing. When the foundational components are open, shared, and maintained in common, developers everywhere spend less time wiring up infrastructure and more time on the parts of a solution that actually improve care — and they keep ownership of what they build.

The shift we're built for:

  • from vertical, single-program solutions → reusable building blocks ·
  • from external vendor lock-in → locally-owned innovation ·
  • from bespoke integrations → open standards & interoperability.

These building blocks are designed for the realities of global health — secure, offline-capable, and built to work in low-resource and low-connectivity settings — and are stewarded in a neutral, community-owned home at the Linux Foundation.

Project pillars

The OHS-SF organizes its work into three pillars — each a different way to engage, all grounded in open standards for health and AI.

Each repository in this organization belongs to one of the three pillars (filterable via the pillar property and ohs-* topics).

Pillar What it covers Status
01 FHIR Foundations Standards-based building blocks — libraries, SDKs, and components that make it easier to build with HL7 FHIR Active
02 OHS Player A Multiplatform (Android, iOS, Web) reference toolkit to build and deploy FHIR — and, soon, AI — solutions faster Active
03 AI Commons A neutral space for safe, verifiable, model-agnostic AI for global health — evals, benchmarks, and tooling Forming

01 · FHIR Foundations

Standards-based building blocks. Foundational libraries, SDKs, and components for building with HL7 FHIR — the consolidated "plumbing" so you don't rebuild it | View Collection

Choosing a generation: android-fhir is the mature, production-proven stack for Android. The kotlin-* libraries are a Kotlin Multiplatform next generation under active development — ideal for cross-platform work, but APIs may still change.

Repository Component Maturity
android-fhir Android FHIR SDK — Kotlin libraries for offline-capable, mobile-first FHIR apps (Structured Data Capture, FHIR Engine, Workflow) Maintenance
fhir-gateway FHIR Info Gateway — reverse proxy for access-control and privacy policies in front of any FHIR store Stable
fhir-data-pipes FHIR Analytics — pipelines that transform FHIR into SQL-on-FHIR for scalable querying & dashboards Stable
kotlin-fhir Kotlin FHIR — lean FHIR data model on Kotlin Multiplatform Beta
kotlin-fhirpath Kotlin FHIRPath — FHIRPath on Kotlin Multiplatform Beta
kotlin-fhir-data-capture Kotlin SDC — Multiplatform data capture from FHIR Questionnaires Alpha
kotlin-fhir-engine Kotlin FHIR Engine — Multiplatform on-device FHIR storage & sync Evolving

02 · OHS Player

A Multiplatform reference toolkit that shows how to assemble FHIR Foundations components into working solutions across Android, iOS, and Web — so teams build and deploy faster | | View Collection

Repository Role
ohs-player Reference toolkit overview & entry point
ohs-player-reference-client-app Configurable Kotlin Multiplatform client app
ohs-player-reference-web-portal Web portal for managing workforce hierarchies
ohs-player-reference-infrastructure Deployment scripts & container images

Reference, not product. The Foundation publishes building blocks and reference toolkits — not standalone, deployable end-user products. Player is a starting point you adapt and own.

03 · AI Commons (Launching)

A neutral space for safe, effective AI in global healthforming. Model-agnostic collaboration on evals, benchmarks, verifiable AI, and supporting tooling (skills, MCPs), in partnership with the WHO and the wider ecosystem.

Repositories will appear here as the pillar takes shape. Have a project to donate or an idea to support? Let's talk.


Start here

If you want to… Begin with
Build cross-platform (Android, iOS, JVM, Web) on FHIR the kotlin-* libraries (next-generation, evolving)
Add access control / privacy in front of a FHIR store fhir-gateway
Run analytics and query FHIR data with SQL fhir-data-pipes
See a reference toolkit assembled end-to-end "OHS Player" Toolkit
Contribute to the community Contributing

Get Involved

We are looking for contributors, health systems, and technology partners to help shape the future of open-source digital health building blocks.

Governance

OHS-SF is a community-driven, vendor-neutral project hosted by the Linux Foundation, with open governance set by the community doing the work. The formal charter and governance model are being finalized by the formation group and will be published here as the Foundation launches.

Contributing

We welcome contributions of every kind — code, documentation, testing, design, and field feedback from real deployments. Contributing to technical projects does not require Foundation membership.

  • New here? Browse good first issue across the org.
  • Each repository has its own contribution and build instructions in its README and/or CONTRIBUTING.md.
  • Reporting a vulnerability? Healthcare software deserves extra care — please follow each repo's security policy and do not open public issues for security reports.

Code of Conduct

This project follows the OHS Software Foundation Code of Conduct. By participating, you are expected to uphold these standards.

Community

There are multiple ways to join the conversation:

Sign up to our mailing list to receive regular updates and details for upcming calls and events

Project History

Open Health Stack launched in 2023 — created at Google in collaboration with the WHO and a global developer community — as a suite of Digital Public Goods for FHIR-native digital health.

OHS transitioned from a Google-led project into an independent, community-owned umbrella project at the Linux Foundation — a neutral home built to steward these building blocks for the long term and to serve the global health ecosystem that depends on them.

License

OHS components are released under the Apache License 2.0 unless a repository states otherwise.

HL7® and FHIR® are registered trademarks of Health Level Seven International. Use does not constitute endorsement.

Popular repositories Loading

  1. android-fhir android-fhir Public

    The Android FHIR SDK is a set of Kotlin libraries for building offline-capable, mobile-first healthcare applications using the HL7® FHIR® standard on Android.

    Kotlin 595 331

  2. fhir-data-pipes fhir-data-pipes Public

    A collection of tools for extracting FHIR resources and analytics services on top of that data.

    Jupyter Notebook 221 124

  3. fhir-gateway fhir-gateway Public

    A generic proxy server for applying access-control policies for a FHIR-store.

    Java 103 42

  4. kotlin-fhir kotlin-fhir Public

    Kotlin FHIR is a lean and fast implementation of the HL7® FHIR® data model on Kotlin Multiplatform.

    Kotlin 65 12

  5. fhir-app-examples fhir-app-examples Public

    Contains examples of how Open Health Stack components can be used together as the foundation for FHIR based digital health solutions

    Kotlin 57 28

  6. kotlin-fhirpath kotlin-fhirpath Public

    Kotlin FHIRPath is an implementation of FHIRPath on Kotlin Multiplatform.

    Kotlin 11 3

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