Archive for the ‘World Wide Web’ Category

eJHI - electronic Journal of Health Informatics

Friday, September 8th, 2006

electronic journal of health informatics - ejhi

The eJHI (electronic Journal of Health Informatics Inaugural Issue is online here.

Table of Contents:

Editorial
Editor’s Introduction to this Journal: Advancing Health Informatics and the Use of Information, Knowledge and Communication Technologies in Health Care
Evelyn J.S. Hovenga
Guest Editor’s Introduction to Special Issue on Health Data Mining
Jim Warren, John Roddick, Geoff Webb, Graham Williams

Papers
Finding Anomalies in Medicare
Robert A. Pearson, Wayne Murray, Thomas Mettenmeyer
Epidemiological data mining of cardiovascular Bayesian networks
Charles R. Twardy, Ann E. Nicholson, Kevin B. Korb, John McNeil
Frequency-based Rare Events Mining in Administrative Health Data
Jie Chen, Huidong Jin, Hongxing He, Christine M. O’Keefe, Ross Sparks, Graham Williams, Damien McAullay, Chris Kelman
Inferring ‘Therapeutic States’ of Patients from Community Electronic Prescribing Data
Jim Warren, Jan Stanek, Svetla Gadzhanova, Ivan Iankov, Gary Misan
Towards Role Based Hypothesis Evaluation for Health Data Mining
Anna Shillabeer, John F. Roddick
Research within the Privacy Regulations: Problems and Solutions for Database Custodians
Ea Mulligan, Wendy A. Rogers, Annette Braunack-Mayer

Nerd TV Videos

Sunday, September 3rd, 2006

Nerd TV

Robert X Cringely has been interviewing some grandaddys (and mommas) of the tech industry over at Nerd TV.

Highlights include:

Doug Englebert: Inventor of the computer mouse.

Bill Joy: Co-founder of Sun Microsystems.

Max Levchin: Co-founder of Paypal.

Tim O’Reilly: Open source pioneer.

ARPAnet Video

Wednesday, August 16th, 2006

Fascinating video made in 1972 by the creators of the ARPAnet. The engineers who invented the precursor to the internet outline why the internet was required and the problems it was solving.

Medical Wikis

Sunday, July 23rd, 2006

Since Wikipedia has risen to public attention, there have been quite a few medical wiki’s set up. What’s a wiki? Well according to Wikipedia:

 ”A wiki is a type of website that allows users to easily add, remove, or otherwise edit and change most available content, sometimes without the need for registration.”

Check out these medical wikis:

Ask Dr Wiki - Free source of X-rays, ECGs, etc.

GANFYD (Get a Note From Your Doctor) - set up by a bunch of docs from the Doctors.net.uk discussion forums. You have to be a doctor to write information on this wiki.

Flu Wiki - Aims to help local communities prepare for a possible influenza pandemic.

Clinifowiki - This is a clinical informatics wiki with information on Electronic Medical Records and hospital IT systems.

Wellness Wiki - The aim of this wiki is to “help clarify the complex problems plaguing the U.S. healthcare system and develop sustainable ways to improve the health and well-being of all people”.

If you would like to start your own medical wiki, it’s fairly straight-forward: You could try out a free wiki service like wikispaces or roll your sleeves up and install mediawiki on your own website.

If you don’t want to set up your own wiki, why not contribute to wikipedia’s various health sections (anyone can contribute) or if you are doc, add some info to GANFYD.

Google Health

Tuesday, July 4th, 2006

Google Health is a new service from the leading search engine, Google. The service integrates with the normal search engine interface and is triggered by users entering health related queries.

When a users searches for medical information, a number of options become available at the top of the Seach Engine Results Page (SERP). These seem to be variable depending on how the results have been classified but include such options as ‘For Professionals’,'For Patients’, ‘Treatment’, ‘Symptoms’, ‘Tests and Diagnosis’, ‘Risk Factors’, ‘From Medical Establishment’ and ‘Alternative Medicine’.

Google Health is a product of the new Google Co-op system. According to Eric Schmidt, Google CEO, Google Co-op is the most exciting product launch of the year. Google Co-op allows external companies and individuals to help classify and refine Google’s SERPs. For certain subjects, such as Google Health, the SERPs will automatically contain the classifications defined by the Co-op. For other subjects, users are able to ’subscribe’ to Co-op members classification schemes (you can subscibe to NMM’s profile here).

Co-op contributors to Google Health include the National Library of Medicine, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Health on the Net, Harvard Medical School, Mayo Clinic and others. See the full list here. The list also includes Enoch Choi as an individual contributor. Enoch has outlined some of the details on how he contributes sites on his weblog.

According to ZDNet, Google Health is under the leadership of Adam Bosworth, former VP of Engineering at BEA Systems.

Testing out Google Health is fairly straightforward, simply enter a health related query at www.google.com and click on the links at the top. Feel free to post a comment here with your opinions on the relevancy of the Google Health SERPs.