Report 1 · Regulatory study · Australia–Colombia 2026
Mandatory Interoperability
A 360° analysis of Colombia's Resolution 1888 of 2025: the FHIR R4 mandate, the analyzer → RDA data chain, and the exact point where compliance breaks — read against the Australian institutions that ran this race a decade earlier.
Read the report — no signupReport 1 · Interoperability & Resolution 1888

What the report covers
The regulatory pyramid: why Resolution 1888 borrows its force from habilitation — your licence to operate, not a fine.
The data chain: who is actually obligated (the HIS) — and who is not (the analyzer, the LIMS, the distributor).
The translation gap: the single point where HL7 v2 / ASTM must become FHIR R4 — the real bottleneck.
The Australian mirror: the same destination reached in 14 years vs Colombia's compressed 6 — and what it predicts.
“The structured lab result is deferred — but dated on the horizon. When it lands, LIMS↔FHIR and CUPS↔LOINC mapping becomes mandatory, and today no one has solved it. That is where the first mover wins.”
Written for

About the author
Andrey Torres
Biomedical engineer working in clinical architecture, FHIR interoperability and lab operational intelligence, across implementations in Colombia and Australia. Builder of STRATEGOS — strategy as a knowledge graph with an explainable AI agent.