Austria's representative to SNOMED International is ELGA GmbH, through which the SNOMED CT® terminology standard and related assets are made available to Austrian users.
The Federal Public Service of Public Health, Food Chain Safety and Environment will assume the liability of the distribution of SNOMED CT within Belgium.
Cyprus joins SNOMED International to bring structure and consistency in the sharing of health information for patient care, clinical decision support and research purposes.
In 2012 the Czech Republic became a Member joining a global effort to develop, maintain, and enable the use of SNOMED CT in health systems around the world.
The Danish Health Data Authority represents Denmark to SNOMED International. The Danish Health Data Authority is an agency under the Ministry of Health.
In January 2010 Estonia became a Member, joining a global effort to develop, maintain, and enable the use of SNOMED CT in health systems around the world.
In November 2018 Finland joined the organization to leverage SNOMED CT’s structured clinical vocabulary to structure its Kanta Service and realize improvements in how clinical data is recorded, analyzed and reported on for the benefit of patient care.
The German representative to SNOMED International is the the Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices (Bundesinstitut für Arzneimittel und Medizinprodukte, BfArM), an independent federal higher authority within the portfolio of the Federal Ministry of Health.
In September 2011 Iceland became a Member, joining a global effort to develop, maintain, and enable the use of SNOMED CT in health systems around the world.
Ireland joined as a Member in November 2016 after an extensive consultation process, which included a report from the Health Information and Quality Authority (HIQA).
The Ministry of Health (MOH) bears national responsibility for ensuring the health of the population of Israel.
Jordan’s representative to SNOMED International is Electronic Health Solutions (EHS).
Lithuania’s representative to SNOMED International is the Lithuanian Library of Medicine, which is a component of the Ministry of Health.
Luxembourg’s representative to SNOMED International is Agence eSanté.
In October 2011 Malta joined SNOMED International, contributing to the global effort to develop, maintain, and enable the use of SNOMED CT in health systems around the world.
The Dutch representative to SNOMED International is the Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport.
The Norwegian Directorate of eHealth is a subordinate institution of the Norwegian Ministry of Health and Care Services and is leading the implementation of SNOMED CT in Norway.
In January 2014 Portugal became a Member, joining a global effort to develop, maintain, and enable the use of SNOMED CT in health systems around the world.
In January 2010, the Republic of Slovenia became a Member of SNOMED International, joining a global effort to develop, maintain, and enable the use of SNOMED CT in health systems around the world.
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has joined an international effort to develop, maintain, and enable the use of SNOMED CT in their health systems.
The Slovak Republic's representative to SNOMED International is the National Health Information Center.
Spain joined as a Member in April 2009 following a strategic decision to adopt SNOMED CT® within the Spanish National Health System as reference clinical terminology for its digital health records.
The National Board of Health and Welfare has, within the Swedish strategy for eHealth, the overall responsibility for providing national resources for standardized health and social care information.
In January 2016 Switzerland became a Member, joining a global effort to develop, maintain, and enable the use of SNOMED CT in health systems around the world.
The United Kingdom (UK) is a founder member of SNOMED International, and its representative is NHS Digital, on behalf of the UK countries.