Message Structure
Components of message and their details
Message Structure
To facilitate safe, secure, and reliable message exchanges through HCX, its message payload needs to be designed in a manner that separates the actual use case-specific information (payload) from transport and generic domain-specific information (headers). To achieve this, HCX messages can be structured in line with JWE tokens as below (value in bracket are the corresponding JSON keys as per JWE):
Protected headers (protected) - A set of attributes that provide transport, security, message integrity and summary information about the message being exchanged.
Encrypted Payload (ciphertext) - Payload containing the relevant domain entity (eObject) as prescribed for the use case by the domain specifications. This needs to be encrypted so that HCX cannot read this.
Signature (tag) - Digital signature on the protected header and the payload of the message to ensure its integrity.
Other JWE elements like iv (Initialisation Vector for the algorithm), , cryptographic mechanisms used in JWE encrypts and provide integrity protection to encrypted payload and protected headers using Authenticated Encryption with Associated Data (AEAD), hence additional signatures are not needed for message integrity protection.aad (additional authentication data), and encrypted_key (Content Encryption Key)
HCX expects the resulting JWE token to be JSON serialised. The following subsections detail each of these message elements:
Protected Headers
Protected headers contain information that helps exchanges to identify senders, receivers of the message, perform integrity checks, audits and routing functionality. Header values are posted in clear and never contain any Personally Identifiable Information (PII) about the patient. HCX protocol uses JWE protected headers for such information to ensure these are not tampered with by the intermediate gateways. Protected Headers for HCX will be the union of the following three header categories:
Registered JOSE Headers
JSON Web encryption header as per RFC7516. For HCX V1, this is proposed to be fixed to:
{"alg":"RSA-OAEP","enc":"A256GCM"}
HCX Protocol Headers
Used as private headers as per RFC7516 section 4.3. Please note that all the parameter names are appended with “x-hcx-” to avoid a collision.
The following table provides the protocol related header elements in the claims exchange:
Name | Description | Type | Additional Properties |
---|---|---|---|
x-hcx-sender_code | Registry code of the sender (e.g. provider or payer) | String |
|
x-hcx-recipient_code | Registry code of the recipient (e.g. provider or payer) | String |
|
x-hcx-api_call_id | Sender generated unique id for each originating request. All senders (providers & payors) must generate and set a unique value to the x-hcx-api_call_id protocol header in all the API calls to the HCX gateway. This header will be useful in tracking individual HTTP API calls to HCX, request level issue resolution with/at HCX and for debugging. | String |
|
x-hcx-correlation_id | Unique id for all messages (requests & responses) that are involved in processing of one cycle (like coverage eligibility, pre-auth, claim, or payment notice cycle). The participant system sending the originating request of the cycle must set the x-hcx-correlation_id in the initial API call and the HCX gateway shall forward the same correlation id to the recipient of the request. The recipient must set the same correlation id in the response API call and in other API calls related to the original request (e.g. communication request, forward/redirect requests). And the same correlation id must be sent in all subsequent API calls (related to the same cycle). In case of status request API call, this header should have the correlation id of the request for which the status is being requested for. | String |
|
x-hcx-workflow_id | Optional identifier to track all the messages related to a single hospitalisation episode. The workflow id spans over multiple cycles of message exchanges within a single admission/case. This is an optional header that can be set by providers to the same value for all requests (coverage eligibility check, preauth, claim, etc) related to a single admission/case. And when the workflow_id is sent by the originating provider, all other participant systems (payors) must set the same workflow id in all API calls (responses, forwards/redirects, payment notices, etc) related to the workflow.
| String |
|
x-hcx-timestamp | Unix timestamp of the message while sending | datetime |
|
x-hcx-debug_flag | Request to the server to include debug information. Useful in the time of integration testing and prod debugging. However, server(s) may choose to ignore this flag based on their policy. | ENUM - Error - Info - Debug |
|
x-hcx-status | Operational status of the message. Depending on the leg of the message it would be:
| String |
|
x-hcx-redirect_to | Expected to be set when the x-hcx-status value is "response.redirect". The value should be the registry code of the recipient to whom the request has to be redirected to. | String |
|
x-hcx-error_details | Expected to be used for providing details of the status. It Will be especially useful in scenarios where Operational status indicates an irrecoverable error. Key elements of this object are:
| JSON Object - E.g. {code: “bad.input”, message: “Provider code not found”, trace: “”} |
|
x-hcx-debug_details | Expected to be used for providing details of the status. It Will be especially useful in debugging scenarios Key elements of this object are:
| JSON Object - E.g. {code: “bad.input”, message: “Provider code not found”, trace: “”} |
|
HCX Domain Headers
JSON object containing a map of domain-specific header values as proposed in domain data specifications. E.g. For claims use cases, domain specs may decide to populate the total claimed amount, list of diagnostics/procedures. Please note that all such parameter names must follow the naming convention x-hcx-<use_case_name>-<parameter_name>, where
use_case_name = short name (<16 chars) given to the use case by domain working group, it is advisable to keep it the same as the one in API’s URI path
Parameter_name = short name (<32 chars) given to the parameter
Domain Header Name | Description |
---|---|
x-hcx-insurance_plan_url | This domain header has to be returned in the successful response to coverage eligibility check API. The value should be a url to the InsurancePlan object with the details on benefits, required documents and other important information to submit claims. |
Therefore the protected headers will be:
Protected Headers = (Registered JOSE headers) U (HCX Protocol Headers) U (HCX Domain Headers)
Payload
Use case-specific base64 encoded, encrypted payload as defined in Domain Data specifications. This can be thought of as a private claim in JWT terminology. JSON web encryption as defined in RFC7516 to be used for encrypting the payload with “alg” and “enc” as defined in the JOSE header above.
E.g. In the current cashless claims scenario, domain working groups have decided the payload to be an FHIR bundle of the appropriate type. Therefore the payload will be an encrypted FHIR bundle as defined in the domain data specs.
Signatures
As per RFC7516, cryptographic mechanisms used in JWE encrypts and provides integrity protection to encrypted payload and protected headers using Authenticated Encryption with Associated Data (AEAD), hence additional signatures are not needed for message integrity protection.
Follwing section provides details of the API structure and the API responses.
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