Handbook / Home observations, made clinical-grade
The data
Home observations, made clinical-grade
Care that happens in a living room usually leaves no usable record. co-op.care structures what caregivers observe so it becomes data a clinician — or a hospital — can actually use.
How it works
Observations are captured using the Omaha System, a recognized framework for documenting community and home health, and mapped to FHIR, the standard format electronic health records speak. The result: what a neighbor notices at the kitchen table can flow, with consent, into the clinical record — closing the gap between home and health system instead of widening it.
Source: The Omaha System (standardized taxonomy for home/community care) and HL7 FHIR (health-data interoperability standard).
This page is education, not tax, legal, or medical advice. Whether a specific expense qualifies depends on your situation, your plan, and a clinician’s determination — and the rules change. Talk to a tax advisor and your benefits administrator about your own case.