Noted medical informatician and past contributor to Linux Medical News Scot Silverstein writes on the AMIA clinical information system working group forum: ‘…Don Lindberg in 1969: “computer engineering experts per se have virtually no idea of the real problems of medical or even hospital practice, and furthermore have consistently underestimated the complexity of the problems�in no cases can [building appropriate clinical information systems] be done, simply because they have not been defined with the physician as the continuing major contributor and user of the information” (Lindberg DAB: Computer Failures and Successes, Southern Medical Bulletin 1969;57:18-21). In Collen’s book of the history of medical informatics, other pioneers in clinical IT gave similar advice (e.g., Octo Barnett’s “Ten Commandments” in 1970).
Category Archives: Interesting Developments
GCN: Open source gaining ground at local level
From this Government Computer News article: ‘State and local governments are giving more consideration to use of open-source code to help relieve budget pressures, according to market research firm Input Inc.
The Reston, Va.-based firm reported this month that state and local government agencies are leading the public sector market in adopting open-source software because of IT budget restraints, increasing hardware and software licensing costs, and the need to manage operations more aggressively than the federal government…’
Table of Windows and Linux Application Equivalents
Here is a link to a web page that maintains a table of Windows and Linux application equivalents or analogs. Thanks to J. Antas for this link.
AAFP/ASTM’s Continuity of Care Record
The American Academy of Family Practitioners (AAFP and the ASTM standards organization is reporting the: ‘ASTM Continuity of Care Record (CCR) is being developed in response to the need to organize and make transportable a set of basic information about a patient’s health care that is accessible to clinicians and patients. It is intended to foster and improve continuity of care, reduce medical errors, and ensure a minimum standard of secure health information transportability. Adoption of the CCR by the medical community and IT vendors will be a first step in achieving interoperability of medical records (one of CHiT’s guiding principles)…’ Thanks to Dan Johnson for this link.
High Hopes for New Jersey EMR
The Philadelphia Business Journal is reporting that New Jersey will attempt a state wide EMR: ‘…An electronic health records system would improve the quality of health care and make health information available when and where it is needed,” Department of Banking and Insurance Acting Commissioner Donald Bryan said. “Diagnostic tools would suggest the best medical practices. Medical errors would be minimized. Payers and specialists would be able to avoid unnecessary tests and the system would lower administrative costs…’ They have high hopes indeed for this system. Depending upon the implementation, the reality could be different. Thanks to Medical Informatics Insider for this link.
ELINCS EHR Lab Standard Announced
ELINCS is a project to standardize lab reporting for the purpose of inclusion into an EHR. According to the project website: ‘…The EHR-Lab Interoperability and Connectivity Standards (ELINCS) project will develop a national standard for the delivery of real-time laboratory results from a lab�s information system to an electronic health record. Typically this process can be a fractured one in which lab results are sent to the ordering doctor�s office via fax or mail. The results must be filed in the patient�s paper chart or manually entered into the physician�s EHR…’ Public comments are being accepted May 13 through May 26 with more details at the above link. There’s also a press release. Thanks to Nancy Anthracite for these links.
Plone used for UNC medical school portal
Newsforge has a story about the University of North Carolina School of Medicine and affiliated hospitals use of Plone content management software. Free and Open Source Web content management software is a great success story for FOSS and UNC appears to be making good use of it: ‘ At the University of North Carolina School of Medicine and affiliated hospitals, intranet and Web site users felt like they were “visiting a foreign land” each time they landed on a different department, says UNC Healthcare IT staff director Jim Walsh. Each department had it own look and feel, which made a hodge-podge for people going from site to site to perform searches and look up information. Today, however, after a revamp that included migration to the Plone open source content management system, site visitors have sense of a unified organization, and UNC staff feel at home with the new technology…’ Linux Medical News does not use Plone yet, but may in the future since it is based upon the same Zope software.
Blog: “Doers” don’t get Open Source
Brad Barclay’s blog has a report about the Canadian EHealth Conference 2005. He concludes that the ‘doers’ (implementers) of EHR’s do not understand FOSS: ‘There are billions of dollars available in Canada to implement IT solutions for health care, but it could all be wasted because the “doers” don’t understand the concept of Open Source…in setting up their information technology, had they considered Open Source as a solution?
The answers were long winded, but boiled down to this: the panellists didn’t feel Open Source was a viable alternative at this time.
Spatiotemporal Epidemiological Modeler (STEM)
Slashdot had a link to this article on IBM‘s website regarding a interesting epidimiological modeler that runs on Linux. The screenshot in the upper right hand corner tells the story. Excerpt: ‘…Policymakers responsible for creating strategies to contain diseases and prevent epidemics need an accurate understanding of disease dynamics and the likely outcomes of preventative actions. In an increasingly connected world with extremely efficient global transportation links, the vectors of infection can be quite complex. STEM facilitates the development of advanced mathematical models, the creation of flexible models involving multiple populations (species) and interactions between diseases, and a better understanding of epidemiology…’
California Medical Society Endorses Athena Software
Editor’s note: the website appears to be up now, but turn your speaker volume down for a noisy sales pitch. Health Data Management has a story on the California Medical Society endorsing Athena’s (note the spelling, this is NOT Aetna) ASP software which I hope works better than its website which at the time of this writing is down. ‘The California Medical Association has endorsed the software and services of athenahealth Inc. and will make them available at discounted pricing to its 35,000 physician members.
The Waltham, Mass.-based vendor sells physician practice management software remotely hosted via the application service provider computing model. It also offers outsourced billing and collections services…’