Wednesday, May 13, 2009
President's Stimulus Law Provides Funds for Informatics Initiatives
Another outcome of the stimulus package is the creation of two advisory committees - the Health IT Policy Committee and the Health IT Standards Committee. These committees were established to make policy recommendations for an interoperable health IT system to David Blumenthal, National Coordinator For Health IT.
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Google Health Continues to Fix Bugs in Its PHR
Monday, May 4, 2009
Medical Informatics - Continuing Education
Medical Library Association:
Informatics courses currently listed in the Medical Library Association Continuing Education Clearinghouse on Informatics are:
Clinical Genomics: From Bench to Bedside
Incorporating Informatics into the Curriculum
Informatics and EHR: Envisioning the Future
Information Insecurities: How Secure is Secure Enough?
Making Sense of Protein Sequences
Woods Hole:
BioMedical Informatics Course Overview (Woods Hole)
These week-long survey courses are designed to familiarize individuals with the application of information science and computer technologies in health care, biomedical research, and health professions education. Through a combination of lectures and hands-on computer exercises, participants will be introduced to the conceptual and technical components of medical informatics.
The AMIA 10x10 uses curricular content from existing informatics training programs and other AMIA educational initiatives with a special emphasis toward programs with a proven track record in distance learning. The content will provide a framework but also cover plenty of detail, especially in areas such as electronic and personal health records, health information exchange, standards and terminology, and health care quality and error prevention.
Courses available from:
Oregon Health & Science University – Registration to open July 2009
University of Alabama at Birmingham – Registration to open June 2009
University of Illinois at Chicago
University of Minnesota School of Nursing – Registration to open June 2009
A short course in informatics is available from the
Introduction to Medical Informatics
An overview of the interdisciplinary nature of Medical Informatics that should be of interest to physicians, nurses, health care administrators, medical librarians, IT techs and others. To meet your scheduling needs, this course is taught completely online, with an emphasis on the real world interaction between medicine and technology and not on theory. Every effort is made to provide practical and up-to-date examples of issues and interesting emerging technologies for the student.
Online tutorials available on:
BLAST QuickStart: Example-Driven Web-Based BLAST Tutorial
Identification of Disease Genes: Example-Driven Web-Based Tutorial
Opportunities for Training and Education Sponsored by the National Library of Medicine
Friday, May 1, 2009
MIS Blog Guidelines
Primarily, topics should be related to the field of medical informatics, especially the role of librarians in this field. Topics can include new articles, relevant legislation, new research, and upcoming conference and educational opportunities. The goal of the blog is to provide a forum for discussion and sharing developments in the field.
Posting to the MIS Blog
All MIS officers may post directly to the blog, and will have Blogger “Author” privileges. This means that they can create and edit their own posts. The blog editor (the one person with “admin” access to Blogger) will be able to write blog posts, moderate comments, and edit or delete other blog posts and comments. The editor may gather a group of interested MIS members to act as frequent blog posters. These blog posters will have Blogger “author” privileges, allowing publishing and editing of their own posts. Any MIS member may submit a piece to the blog editor to be posted, if the item falls within the scope of the blog it will be posted.
Commenting on MIS Blog posts
Anyone may post a comment on any MIS Blog post. Anonymous comments are not permitted. The comments will be moderated simply to avoid spam, not to edit content. If comments become dramatically off-topic, the blog editor will privately inform the commenter of the scope of the blog. Inappropriate comments will be removed immediately.
Both blog posts and comments should follow the MLA Task Force on Social Networking Software Guidelines for Bloggers: http://sns.mlanet.org/blog/blog_guidelines.php
MIS Blog Editor
The blog editor is responsible for installing and maintaining the blog software, along with monitoring posts and comments.