The UAB Informatics Institute and Why It Isn`t Just a Division of
Transcription
The UAB Informatics Institute and Why It Isn`t Just a Division of
The UAB Informatics Institute and Why It Isn’t Just a Division of Computer Science Dr. James Cimino UAB Informatics Institute 11:15am, April 8, 2015 in CH405 Abstract The field of biomedical informatics arose organically from many parallel efforts by computer engineers assigned to biological or medical tasks and doctors who knew how to program computers. What started as a collection of “let’s build something and see if it will work” projects has evolved into an academic discipline that is part scientific method and part art, based on collaborations between biologists, clinicians, computer scientists, engineers of all sorts, cognitive scientists and even philosophers. Today, we have a spectrum of domains, from bioinformatics, through translational research informatics, to clinical informatics. UAB presents a microcosm of the field, with islands of informatics efforts in the Comprehensive Cancer Center, the Department of Pathology, the Department of Medicine, the Genetics Department, and Center for Clinical and Translational Science, and the School of Health Professions, to name a few. The Dean of the UAB School of Medicine has recently established three new programs to consolidate and coordinate this activity: the Center for Genomic Medicine, the Personalized Medicine Institute, and the Informatics Institute, directed by Jim Cimino. Dr. Cimino will provide an overview of the field of informatics, outline the goals of each of the UAB initiatives and, with luck, show informatics will connect the dots. Biography Dr. James Cimino is a board certified internist who completed a National Library of Medicine informatics fellowship at the Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard University and then went on to an academic position at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and the Presbyterian Hospital in New York. His principle research areas included desiderata for controlled terminologies, mobile and Web-based clinical information systems for clinicians and patients, and a context-aware form of clinical decision support called “infobuttons”. In 2008, he moved to the National Institutes of Health, where he is the Chief of the Laboratory for Informatics Development and a Tenured Investigator at the NIH Clinical Center and the National Library of Medicine. His principle project involves the development of the Biomedical Translational Research Information System (BTRIS). He conducts clinical research informatics research, directs the NLM’s postdoctoral training program in clinical informatics, serves as an internal medicine consultant in the Clinical Center, and teaches at Columbia University and Georgetown University as an Adjunct Professor. He is co-editor (with Edward Shortliffe) of a leading textbook on Biomedical Informatics and is an Associate Editor of the Journal of Biomedical Informatics. In 2015, he moved to the University of Alabama in Birmingham as the inaugural director of the Informatics Institute.