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Explore key themes in Health IT and resources used in the course, discuss opportunities and challenges in healthcare informatics, and brainstorm ideas for course improvement.
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Design of Health Technologieslecture 24 John Canny12/05/05
Course Wrap-up In this class, we’ll lay out what we’ve discovered in looking at Health IT over the semester. I’m going to start by collecting together some resources that have been useful (books, journals, conferences, websites). Then we’ll summarize the major themes of the course. Treat this as a collaborative design exercise. How would you design this course now if you were giving it?
Resources - Books “Medical Informatics" by E.H. Shortliffe et al., Springer, 2001 Note: This is part of a series onHealth Informatics at Springer.
Resources - Books “Handbook of Medical Informatics,” J.H. van Bemmel and M.A. Musen, Springer 1997.
Resources - Books “Healthcare Information Systems” Ed. By K. Beaver (Auerbach)
Journals Journals we drew from: • JAMIA – J. of the American Medical Informatics Assoc. • Telemedicine and e-Health • IEEE Trans. on Information Technology in Biomedicine • Health Informatics • Studies in Health Technology and Informatics • Biosensors and Bioelectronics • PLoS (Public Library of Science) Biology • The Lancet • JAMA – Journal of the American Medical Association • Disease Management and Health Outcomes
Journals Other Journals/Magazines we used • British Journal of Psychiatry • Journal of Health Psychology • Nature and Nature Reviews: Neuroscience • Sensors • Healthcare Informatics Online (Magazine) • IEEE Technology and Society • British Computer Society
More Journals • Artificial Intelligence in Medicine (Elsevier) • Computers in Biology and Medicine (Pergamon Press) • Computers in Biomedical Research (Academic Press) • Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine (Elsevier) • IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Magazine • Journal of Medical Systems (Plenum Press) • MD Computing (Springer-Verlag) • Medical Informatics & The Internet in Medicine (Taylor & Francis) • Methods of Information in Medicine (Schattauer) • Yearbook of Medical Informatics (Schattauer)
Conferences • EMBC: Annual International Conference of the Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society • AMIA Annual Symposium (and Spring Congress) • HEALTHCOM: Health Communication Conference • MEDINFO: (every 3 years, next in 2007), run by the IMIA (International Medical Informatics Association) • WWW conference has a health track (one theme day) • ISTAS
Web Sites • National Library of Medicine http://www.nlm.nih.gov/and http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PubMed/ • Agency for Health Research and Qualityhttp://www.ahcpr.gov/ • California Health Care Foundation http://www.chcf.org/ • Healthcare Guidelines Clearinghouse http://www.guideline.gov • Cochrane database of clinical trials:http://hiru.mcmaster.ca/cochrane/ • Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) www.phrusa.org
Summary Health Care IT is a huge industry – apparently one of the top-4 markets for IT. In spite of this, Medical Informatics has rather loose ties with the rest of IT, both in research and industry. Some Reasons: • High overhead – legal, medical, public health, policy, ethics • Hard to identify fundamental research problems • Some is info. science rather than computer science
Summary Early adopters need to package some good research problems for other CS researchers. Or practitioners can come and present their priorities directly to engineers. Easier to publish in existing venues – and explore new ones
Opportunities • CPOE • Telemedicine • Sensors and Labs-on-a-Chip • EMR
Opportunities - CPOE CPOE (Computerized Physician Order Entry) – esp. speech based – fits well with existing practice – clear market advantages, once error rates are low enough. Pen computers may also win here – less clear what’s needed
Opportunities - Telemedicine Telemedicine – esp. in developing countries • Local sensor data collection, possibly analysis • Store-and-forward technology • Video conferencing, high-speed links • Medical image/lab results transfer, compression
Opportunities - Sensing Sensing- • General health/wellness, cardiac, breathing • Chronic conditions – esp. implanted sensors • Immunosensors • Labs-on-a-chip Health care is always easier and cheaper when problems are caught earlier – sensing is cheap in principle. Needed - fairly high level of automationto filter information to caregivers. TCO improvements.
Opportunities - Sensing Continued -
Opportunities - EMR • Federation of many data sources/formats • Must be privacy and security compliant – better privacy filtering methods, fine-grained access controls, robust authentication (possibly biometric) • XML/rich media • Should allow rich and efficient queries • Fast visualization/manipulation • Improved interface design, and adaptability to local work practices. • Short-term target – published guidelines and workflows.
Opportunities - EMR • Continued -
Other Opportunities • ??
Discussion Questions • Discuss the main open challenges in Health Technology – where would you push? • How would you structure a course in Health Technology? • What other approaches (projects, workshops etc.) would you take to mobilize interest in computer science?