Medical informatics

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In its most general sense medical informatics (also called healthcare informatics) is the application of information technology to healthcare. Medical informatics deals more with the clinical and public health aspects and together with Bioinformatics, the broad term preferred is Biomedical Informatics.

Bioinformatics is a subfield of Computational biology; Systems biology and Bioengineering.

Classification

Bioinformatics

For more information, see: Bioinformatics.

The use of information technology in biology is the focus of bioinformatics. Generally speaking, the focus of bioinformatics is rather different, emphasizing sequence analysis, quantitative analysis of protein structure, and similar problems. It is a matter of debate how fundamentally different the two fields are, though the emphasis on healthcare delivery gives medical informatics a decidely different focus. On the one hand, it is argued that advances in medical technology will lead to a tighter linkage of the two fields. Others argue that medical informatics is already a field with clearly defined goals and problems, and that any links between the two fields are speculative at present.

Clinical informatics

This is a very broad field including:[1][2][3]

  • The organization and representation of information in healthcare
  • The development and use of controlled vocabularies in healthcare and computer systems used in healthcare
  • More generally, the development and use of ontologies as an aid to managing health related information
  • Clinical decision support, both as a theoretical and a practical (engineering) problem, in order to promote evidence-based medicine.
  • Information retrieval[4][5]
  • The electronic health record (EHR) and patient record systems are another important area. This is an area that poses a number of technical challenges, but issues such as usability, patient safety and privacy are obviously of paramount importance. Another interesting area is mobility and portability of information. Obviously, in critical care situations it is highly desirable to have access to information that may not be maintained locally (such as adverse reactions), but making this information available raises significant privacy concerns. It also poses a number of technical challenges because systems that are developecd independently may use very disimilar means of representing and storing information. Health information systems must also be convenient to use, and sufficiently comprehensive to be of value to health care providers. If they do not add value to traditional means of information management (such as paper charts, they are unlikely to be used.

Standards

There are two (sometimes competing) standards developing organizations that have focused on developing standards for the representation and interchange of information in informatics. One is Health Level Seven (HL7), and the other is ASTM International, specifically the Technical Committee E31 (Healthcare Informatics).

Message/Interface standards

  • HL7
  • DICOM
  • X12N

Coding systems

  • ICD-9-CM
  • ICD-10
  • SNOMED
  • DSM-IV
  • CPT
  • LOINC

References

  1. Taylor, Paul (2006). From Patient Data to Medical Knowledge: The Principles and Practice of Health Informatics. Blackwell Publishing Limited. ISBN 0-7279-1775-7. 
  2. Coiera, Enrico (2003). Guide to health informatics. London: Arnold. ISBN 0-340-76425-2. 
  3. Shortliffe, Edward Hance; Cimino, James D. (2006). Biomedical Informatics: Computer Applications in Health Care and Biomedicine (Health Informatics). Berlin: Springer. ISBN 0-387-28986-0. 
  4. Hersh, William R. (2003). Information retrieval: a health and biomedical perspective. Berlin: Springer. ISBN 0-387-95522-4. 
  5. Hersh WR, Hickam DH (1998). "How well do physicians use electronic information retrieval systems? A framework for investigation and systematic review". JAMA 280 (15): 1347–52. PMID 9794316[e]

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