HealthFlex

Our Approach — BITFLEX Healthcare Systems Integration
Our Approach

Open. Interoperable.
Designed for India's digital health future.

Our approach is not just a methodology. It is a set of foundational design principles — grounded in open-source technology, standards-based interoperability, and deep alignment with India's national digital health infrastructure.

Design Philosophy

Four principles that govern everything we build.

Healthcare systems must evolve over time. Our design philosophy ensures every system we deliver remains adaptable, interoperable, and aligned with broader digital health ecosystems — long after initial implementation.

01Openness as Infrastructure
We build on proven open-source platforms — OpenMRS, DHIS2, Bahmni, OpenELIS — that carry no proprietary licensing costs, are supported by global health communities, and can be adapted to local operational requirements. Openness is a practical design choice that maximises institutional control and reduces long-term cost.
02Interoperability by Design
Interoperability is not a feature to be added later. Every architecture decision — data models, API structures, identity frameworks — is made with integration in mind from day one. Systems that cannot communicate create care gaps. We eliminate those gaps structurally.
03Alignment with National Digital Health Vision
India's digital health infrastructure is maturing rapidly — ABDM, ABHA, HIE-CM, National Health Registry, and state-level health exchanges. Systems not designed to align with this infrastructure today will require costly retrofitting tomorrow. We build with this alignment as a foundational requirement.
04Longevity Over Launch
The measure of a healthcare system is not how smoothly it launches — but how well it functions 18 months later, and 5 years later. Every design decision we make is evaluated against long-term operational sustainability, not just deployment-day performance.

Open-Source Platform Strategy

Why open-source is the right foundation for healthcare at scale.

Proprietary healthcare platforms create structural dependencies — on vendor roadmaps, licensing terms, and upgrade cycles — that reduce institutional control over critical public health infrastructure.

Open-source platforms are community-governed, globally maintained, and increasingly aligned with international health data standards. They eliminate licensing costs at scale, allow local customisation without vendor permission, and ensure the implementing institution — not the software vendor — retains full system ownership.

Our open-source approach is about building systems that remain under institutional control, can be independently audited, and can integrate with any future platform without architectural re-engineering.

We bring deep implementation expertise across the leading open-source health platforms — and we contribute architectural patterns back to these communities where appropriate.

Discuss your programme
EMR / EHR
OpenMRS & Bahmni
The most widely deployed open-source EMR platforms in low- and middle-income country health systems. Highly configurable, HL7 FHIR-compatible, and proven in complex multi-facility environments.
Public Health
DHIS2
The global standard for public health data aggregation, disease surveillance, and programme monitoring. Used by national health ministries across 100+ countries.
Laboratory
OpenELIS
Open Enterprise Laboratory Information System — purpose-built for diagnostic networks in complex health environments. Integrates with HMIS and public health surveillance platforms.
Interoperability
OpenHIM / HAPI FHIR
The integration middleware stack that enables standards-based data exchange between clinical platforms, government registries, and national health infrastructure.
Data & Analytics
Apache Superset & OpenHIE
Open-source analytics and health information exchange infrastructure — enabling real-time programme dashboards and epidemiological reporting without proprietary BI licensing.
Standards
HL7 FHIR R4 / SNOMED CT / ICD-10
International clinical data standards implemented across all systems we build — ensuring longitudinal record portability and compatibility with India's national health data frameworks.

India's Digital Health Infrastructure

Designed to integrate with India's national health infrastructure from day one.

India's Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM) is building the foundational layer of the country's digital health ecosystem — a federated, standards-based infrastructure connecting patients, providers, and health programs at national scale.

Systems not designed with ABDM compatibility are already architecturally misaligned with India's long-term health IT direction. We build with this alignment as a non-negotiable design requirement — not a future integration option.

Every system we deliver is designed to connect with national health registries, leverage ABHA-based patient identity, participate in the Health Information Exchange, and align with evolving state-level health exchange frameworks.

For government clients, this alignment is directly relevant to ABDM compliance requirements, state health mission mandates, and National Health Stack integration expectations embedded in programme tenders.

Institutional Systems
Hospital HMIS / EMR
LIMS / Diagnostics
Pharmacy & Inventory
Community Health (ASHA/ANM)
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BITFLEX Integration Layer
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National Digital Health Infrastructure
ABDM / ABHA Identity
Health Information Exchange (HIE-CM)
National Health Registry
HMIS / DHIS2 State Reporting
ABDM Alignment
Systems designed to meet ABDM milestone requirements without architectural re-work.
ABHA Patient Identity
Integration with Ayushman Bharat Health Account for longitudinal patient record linkage across facilities.
HIE-CM Participation
Systems capable of participating in Health Information Exchange — enabling consent-based record access.
State Health Mission Compliance
Architecture aligned with NHM requirements, HMIS reporting standards, and state-level health data governance.

Delivery Model

A structured approach to complex implementation.

01
Discovery & Architecture
Deep assessment of existing systems, workflows, integration landscape, and program objectives. Produces a system architecture blueprint and interoperability framework aligned with institutional requirements and national infrastructure standards.
Outputs
Architecture BlueprintIntegration MapABDM Alignment Plan
02
Platform Design & Configuration
Configuration and customisation of open-source platforms to align with local workflows, clinical terminology, and organisational structure. Includes integration layer design and API specification for cross-system connectivity.
Outputs
Configured PlatformsAPI SpecificationData Dictionary
03
Pilot Implementation
Controlled deployment at one or two pilot facilities — validating architecture, integration performance, and workflow alignment in real operating conditions before broader rollout. Structured to surface design issues at minimum cost.
Outputs
Validated ArchitecturePerformance BaselineRollout Plan
04
Scale Deployment
Phased rollout across the full facility or district network — coordinating technical deployment, data migration, operational readiness, and go-live support across multiple simultaneous implementation tracks.
Outputs
Live SystemMigration ValidatedGo-Live Report
05
Stabilisation & Evolution
Ongoing engagement post-deployment — ensuring operational stability, supporting system adoption, managing platform evolution, and maintaining alignment with national health infrastructure as standards and requirements evolve.
Outputs
SLA-Based SupportOptimisation ReportsPlatform Updates
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