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talk: The ‘Learning Health System’ as the Consummate Informatics Challenge

UMBC Information Systems Department
Fall 2012 Distinguished Lecture Series

The 'Learning Health System'
as the Consummate Informatics Challenge

Dr. Charles P. Friedman
Professor of Information and Public Health
Director of the Michigan Health Informatics Program
University of Michigan

11:00am 19 October 2012, ITE456, UMBC

It is widely recognized that the nation requires a Learning Health System (LHS) to provide higher quality, safer, and more affordable health care. An LHS is one that can routinely and securely aggregate data from disparate sources, convert the data to knowledge, and disseminate that knowledge, in actionable forms, to everyone who can benefit from it. Achieving a Learning Health System at national scale requires solution of a wide array of technology and policy problems and, as such, is the consummate challenge in health informatics. This presentation will describe the LHS, why it is vital to our future, the specific problems that must be addressed, and a pathway through which the nation might achieve an LHS.

Charles Friedman directs the Health Informatics program at the University of Michigan. Prior to joining the university in 2011, he was chief scientific officer of the Office of National Coordinator for Health Information Technology in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. From 2007-2009 he served as the nation’s deputy national coordinator for health IT. He has also held federal positions as associate director for research informatics and information technology at the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute at the National Institutes of Health and senior scholar at the National Library of Medicine. He led the creation of informatics programs during his professorships in medicine, information science, and biomedical engineering at the University of Pittsburgh and the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. He is the author of a well-known health informatics textbook and serves as associate editor of the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association.

see http://bit.ly/SVgTEE for more information

Posted: October 12, 2012, 5:02 PM