Update: This standard has been deprecated and is not officially supported; continued use is strongly discouraged. Please use this information for historical and discussion purposes only. Refer to the new B.C. Vaccine Catalogue and Value Set.
Canada Health Infoway, in collaboration with national immunization stakeholders, has developed a standard for the exchange of immunization data between health information systems in Canada. The stakeholders included pan-Canadian community and public health vaccine providers. This data standard prescribes the Minimum Immunization Data Set (MIDS) to be used for various business scenarios as defined by the clinical stakeholders for Immunization Interoperability.
This standard describes a comprehensive list of variables approved in British Columbia (B.C.) to support best practice for documenting immunizations by B.C. vaccine providers.
The purpose of the MIDS is to enable data exchange between immunization systems in B.C. It is expected that the MIDS will interface with Panorama (B.C. immunization repository), other Public Health systems and electronic medical record (EMR) solutions used by vaccine providers in community-based settings.
The following types of clinical data are included:
The MIDS has been reviewed, approved and endorsed by the following sponsors as of December 7, 2016:
As of March 2021, this standard has been deprecated and is not officially supported; continued use is strongly discouraged.
Refer to the new B.C. Vaccine Catalogue and Value Set.
Version 1.0 of the standard was published in November 2017 and is available for download (see links below).
The content of the standard may require post-production edits, additions and/or maintenance to address issues identified by technical validation during implementation and in production. Additional adjustments may be required over time to reflect evolving requirements in B.C., and/or to align with emerging pan-Canadian clinical document architecture and standards developments.
Refer to the new B.C. Vaccine Catalogue and Value Set.
Updated: April 2021