SESSION 421: <br/>Information and knowledge management
Track 2
| Tuesday, July 11, 2023 |
| 1:50 PM - 3:20 PM |
| C4.1 |
Overview
C4.1
Panel & workshop
Panel & workshop
Details
This session contains a 40 minute panel and a 40 minute workshop.
Panel: Computable biomedical knowledge: An imperative for learning health systemsThe panel will introduce the concept of computable biomedical knowledge and illustrate its importance in relation to the achievement of scalable and sustainable Learning Health Systems. The panel will also describe efforts to make computable knowledge findable, accessible, interoperable, reusable, and trusted.
Workshop: Mobilising computable biomedical knowledge: A global opportunity
This workshop will explore with participants the opportunities and barriers for regional, national and global mobilization of computable knowledge in Learning Health Systems. Presenters will introduce the core topics then facilitate group discussion and feedback on the emerging themes.
Speaker
Dr Koray Atalag
Chief Health Informatics Officer
The Clinician
Session chair
Biography
I'm a medical doctor with PhD in Information Systems and a Founding Fellow of the Australasian Institute of Digital Health (FAIDH). Having significant experience in digital health, in particular electronic health records (EHR) and interoperability, I am passionate about making ICT reach its full potential in healthcare. I serve as CHIO at The Clinician, a digital health company, that creates beautiful apps to engage patients, collect patient reported outcome/experience measures (PROMs and PREMs) and objective data from wearables and medical devices to create actionable insights and drive value-based care.
Prof Charles Friedman
Chair, Department of Learning Health Sciences
University of Michigan
Panel: Computable biomedical knowledge: An imperative for learning health systems
1:50 PM - 2:30 PMBiography
Charles Friedman has focused his recent academic interests and activities on the concept of Learning Health Systems, socio-technical infrastructure for learning systems, and information system evaluation. He is editor-in-chief of the open-access journal Learning Health Systems and co-chair of the movement to Mobilize Computable Biomedical Knowledge.
Prof Johanna Westbrook
Professor
Australian Institute of Health Innovation
Panel: Computable biomedical knowledge: An imperative for learning health systems
1:50 PM - 2:30 PMBiography
Johanna I Westbrook (PhD, FACMI, FIAHSI, FTSE, FAIDH) is Professor and Director of the Centre for Health Systems and Safety Research, Australian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie University. Her research focuses on patient safety and the design and execution of large-scale evaluations of information and communication technologies.
Dr Philip Scott
Programme Director
University of Wales Trinity Saint David
Panel: Computable biomedical knowledge: An imperative for learning health systems
1:50 PM - 2:30 PMBiography
Dr Philip Scott is Programme Director at University of Wales Trinity Saint David, Chair of the British Computer Society’s health and care group and co-chair of the MCBK-UK steering group. He has worked on healthcare record structures and interoperability standards, clinical decision support and interdisciplinary theory in health informatics.
Prof Wendy Chapman
Centre Director
The University of Melbourne
Workshop: Mobilising computable biomedical knowledge: A global opportunity
2:30 PM - 3:20 PMBiography
Professor Wendy Chapman is the Associate Dean of Digital Health and Informatics. She also directs the Centre for Digital Transformation of Health. Her research aims to leverage data and digital technology to transform healthcare delivery. She is currently serving on the Board of the Australasian Institute of Digital Health.
Prof Enrico Coiera FAIDH
Director
Australian Institute of Health Innovation
Workshop: Mobilising computable biomedical knowledge: A global opportunity
2:30 PM - 3:20 PMBiography
Professor Enrico Coiera has been working at the intersection of information technology and healthcare for over three decades. Trained in medicine and with a computer science PhD in Artificial Intelligence, he still leads this field. He is the founding Professor in Medical Informatics at Macquarie University and the founding Director of The Centre for Health Informatics (CHI), which was established at UNSW in 1998 and is now based at Macquarie University. CHI is the longest running biomedical and health informatics academic research group in Australia. He is also the Director of the NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Digital Health and founder of the Australian Alliance for Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare (AAAiH).
Prof Charles Friedman
Chair, Department of Learning Health Sciences
University of Michigan
Workshop: Mobilising computable biomedical knowledge: A global opportunity
2:30 PM - 3:20 PMBiography
Charles Friedman has focused his recent academic interests and activities on the concept of Learning Health Systems, socio-technical infrastructure for learning systems, and information system evaluation. He is editor-in-chief of the open-access journal Learning Health Systems and co-chair of the movement to Mobilize Computable Biomedical Knowledge.
Dr Philip Scott
Programme Director
University of Wales Trinity Saint David
Workshop: Mobilising computable biomedical knowledge: A global opportunity
2:30 PM - 3:20 PMBiography
Dr Philip Scott is Programme Director at University of Wales Trinity Saint David, Chair of the British Computer Society’s health and care group and co-chair of the MCBK-UK steering group. He has worked on healthcare record structures and interoperability standards, clinical decision support and interdisciplinary theory in health informatics.