University of Pittsburgh
School of Information Sciences
Library and Information Science Program
LIS 2587: Applications in Medical Informatics
No pre-requisites.
Intended for masters-level graduate students in the helping and service professions without clinical experience. Also intended for practicing medical librarians and health information professionals who want to update knowledge in the field of medical informatics.
Classes: 2 hours, 50 minutes once each week.
Expected class size: maximum of 20.
Session 1 Session 2 Session 3 Session 4 Session 5 Session 6 Session 7 Session 8 Session 9 Session 10 Session 11 Session 12 Session 13 Session 14 Session 15 1. Attendance & active participation in class
Associate Professor, Department of Library & Information Science
Core Training Faculty, Center for Biomedical Informatics
ellen@sis.pitt.edu
http://www.sis.pitt.edu/~ellen/
CALENDAR
Introduction. Definitions. Literature and Resources of the Field.
Professional Associations, Federal Agencies, and Funders.
Informatics and Education.
IAIMS: the Integrated Advanced Information Management System.
The Unified Medical Language System.
The Electronic Patient Record. HIPAA. Decision Support Systems.
Imaging and Informatics. Pathology Informatics. Radiology
Informatics
Telemedicine and Telehealth.
Nursing Informatics.
Pharmacy Informatics.
Public Health Informatics. International Issues in Informatics.
Dental Informatics. Veterinary Informatics.
Consumer Informatics.
Ethical and Legal Issues in Informatics.
Medical Libraries and Informatics. The Future of Informatics.
The Professional Presentation Session
COURSE REQUIREMENTS
2. Readings as assigned
3. Active participation in the Discussion Boards on CourseWeb
4. 4 written exercises
5. A term project (paper or presentation)
READINGS
[list under construction]
Additional readings may be assigned throughout the course of the term.
EXERCISES
[1]
Choose a professional journal in medical informatics, clear
your choice with the instructor, read at least a year's worth of it, and
write an evaluative review for your colleagues. The reviews will be shared
electronically so that each participant will have the comments from
all other classmates. Each student will review a different journal. The
review should be posted to the Discussion Board on CourseWeb by noon on
the due date so that the entire class can benefit from your review and
evaluation. Please be prepared to discuss your example in class on the due date as well.
[3]
Choose an image-rich medical website (in a field such as anatomy, history of
medicine, radiology, pathology, genetics, etc.) and clear your choice
with the instructor. Explore that website and review it for
your colleagues. The reviews will be shared electronically so that each
participant will have the comments from all other classmates. Each
student will review a different website. The review should be posted to
the Discussion Board on CourseWeb by noon on the due date so that the
entire class can
benefit from your review and evaluation. Please be prepared to demostrate
and discuss your website in class on the due date as well.
[5]
Choose an "intelligent" or "interactive" health website targeted to either
students or consumers [a list of likely candidates will be distributed to
the class], complete the tasks expected of a visitor to the website, and
review the website for your colleagues. The reviews will be shared
electronically so that each participant will have the comments from all
other classmates. Each student will review a different website. The review
should be posted to the Discussion Board on CourseWeb by noon on the due
date so that the entire class can benefit from your review and evaluation.
The sites will be demonstrated in class as well.
You should choose a topic related to a current issue in medical informatics.
In consultation with the instructor, choose a problem that interests you personally or one that needs to be accomplished professionally. For example, you might want to attempt a publishable review of the literature on a medical informatics problem for a professional journal. or you may want to prepare a talk that you can use in the job search process. Clear your choice of topic with the instructor.
Please prepare some kind of 10 minute presentation for a professional meeting, etc., on the topic, or prepare a 10 minute educational session for a specific audience, or prepare a 10 page paper in the form of a manuscript to be submitted to a professional journal. Clear your choice of presentation format with the instructor.
You must prepare a structured abstract for your work, and a 2-page handout/bibliography for presentation to your peers. Your material will be presented in class on the due date. Structured abstracts must be submitted electronically to the instructor one week prior. The actual presentations will be done for the colleagues on the last day of class.
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Please choose and use a standard citation style and style manual whenever you cite the work of another person. A good choice for those interested in medicine is the Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals which may be found on the World Wide Web at http://www.acponline.org/journals/annals/01jan97/unifreqr.htm
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Inclusive language: Gender-inclusive language is required in all course
work. The use of respectful language in any situation is not a matter of
political correctness but one of simple courtesy.
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Students with disabilities who require special accommodations or other
classroom modifications should notify the instructor and the University's
Office of Disability Resources & Services (DRS) no later than the 2nd week
of the term. Students may be asked to provide documentation of their
disability to determine the appropriateness of the request. DRS is located
in 216 William Pitt Union and can be contacted at 412-648-7890 (Voice),
412-624-3346(Fax), and 412-383-7355(TTY). Students who must miss an exam
or class due to religious observances must notify the instructor ahead of
time and make alternative arrangements.
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