These
week-long survey courses are designed to familiarize individuals with the
application of information science and computer technologies in health
care, biomedical research, and health professions education.
Through a combination of lectures and hands-on computer exercises, participants
will be introduced to the conceptual and technical components of medical
informatics.
The conceptual components will include principles of database design,
human-computer interfaces, medical vocabularies and coding systems, medical
decision analysis methods, evaluation methods in medical informatics, and
strategies for designing and managing clinical information systems.
The technical components include use of the Internet for biomedical
applications, current and emerging wide area network technologies,
use of literature and molecular sequence databases, enterprise-wide clinical
data systems, and systems for telemedicine.
Elective evening workshops will teach personal computer skills such
as creation of World Wide Web pages, linkage of web pages to databases,
and use of digital multimedia.
Taught by a nationally known faculty, the course will prepare the student
to become actively involved in making informed decisions about computer-based
tools in his/her organizational environment, and improve the student's
own computer skills.
This is a National Library of Medicine fellowship program directed at
medical educators, medical librarians, medical administrators, and young
faculty who are not currently knowledgeable but can become agents of change
in their institutions.
Limited to 30 fellows for each one week session.
Principles
of Database Design
streaming video lecture by Daniel R. Masys
The
Woods Hole Experience
Andria Brummit, MD Computing, January/February 2001 |