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- Path: sparky!uunet!think.com!ames!agate!ucbvax!CAMIS.STANFORD.EDU!ehs
- From: ehs@CAMIS.STANFORD.EDU (Ted Shortliffe)
- Newsgroups: sci.bio.technology
- Subject: Medical Informatics Training - Stanford University
- Message-ID: <9211191349.AA04612@nettlesome.berkeley.edu>
- Date: 19 Nov 92 13:50:59 GMT
- Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU
- Reply-To: Biotechnology Discussion List <BIOTECH%UMDD.BITNET@cmsa.Berkeley.EDU>
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- Organization: The Internet
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- ----------------------------Original message----------------------------
- Graduate Training in Medical Informatics
- Stanford University School of Medicine
-
- Stanford University's Medical Information Sciences (MIS) training program is an
- interdepartmental program offering instruction and research opportunities
- leading to an MS or a PhD degree in Medical Information Sciences (Medical
- Informatics). The program is administratively based in the Section on Medical
- Informatics (SMI) in the Department of Medicine. It is, however, overseen by
- the Graduate Studies Committee of Stanford University and is viewed by the
- Graduate Division as a free-standing department for purposes of granting
- degrees. The faculty of the program, which numbers over 30 participants, is
- drawn broadly from throughout the medical school and other parts of the
- university. Areas of investigation are broad and include topics such as
- decision-support systems, integrated workstations, knowledge acquisition, speech
- input, pen-based computing, medical records, computational biology, medical
- imaging, reasoning under uncertainty, medical terminology, technology
- assessment, and health-services research.
-
- The design of the Stanford program reflects our belief that the newness of the
- field of medical informatics, the need for trained MIS professionals, and the
- broad opportunities available at Stanford make it appropriate to provide a wide
- range of training options. We therefore offer both M.S. and Ph.D. degrees and
- custom-tailor the classroom and research requirements to the diverse backgrounds
- and professional needs of our students. We require all trainees to be formal
- degree candidates, believing that leaders in the field will require broad formal
- course exposure in addition to intense research training. The curriculum
- provides structured but flexible exposure to topics in the areas of clinical
- medicine (for trainees who are not already health professionals), computational
- biology, computer science, decision science, statistics, operations research,
- psychology, health policy, ethics, technology assessment, and medical
- informatics itself. Trainees attend Tuesday journal clubs and Thursday research
- colloquia offered by faculty, students, staff, and visitors to the university.
-
- The MIS training program is overseen by seven core faculty who serve on the
- administrative and admissions committees. Edward H. Shortliffe, MD, PhD,
- Professor of Medicine and of Computer Science, directs the program and serves as
- head of the SMI. Co-director of the program is Lawrence M. Fagan, MD, PhD,
- Senior Research Scientist. Drs. Shortliffe and Fagan are assisted by Mark A.
- Musen, MD, PhD, Assistant Professor of Medicine and of Computer Science, and
- Director of the program's admissions committee. The program's computing and
- communications environment, plus advanced systems software research, is overseen
- by the Symbolic Systems Resources Group (SSRG), directed by Senior Research
- Scientist Thomas C. Rindfleisch, MS. The newest core faculty include Michael
- Walker, PhD (Senior Research Scientist) and Russ B. Altman, MD, PhD (Assistant
- Professor of Medicine and of Computer Science), both of whom have research
- programs in the area of computational biology and have built associations with
- faculty in the departments of Genetics, Biochemistry, Cell Biology, Mathematics,
- and Statistics. Gio Wiederhold, PhD is on leave with the Defense Advanced
- Research Projects Agency (DARPA) but will soon be returning to resume his
- research and teaching in the area of database systems.
-
- Initiated in 1982, the program has 34 graduates, including 14 with doctorates
- and 20 with master's degrees. All trainees spend half time during their first
- two years in formal coursework and the remainder in focused research projects,
- working with one of the program faculty (or any other faculty member in the
- University who agrees to oversee their work and assure its relevance to the
- medical informatics training goals of our program). All trainees take a
- comprehensive MIS oral examination after two years in the program, and MS
- candidates are also expected to complete a master's research practicum by this
- time. The PhD degree adds an additional two years, with formal defense of a
- thesis proposal at the end of the third year and a completed dissertation at the
- end of the fourth year.
-
- The program includes 22-25 students who are housed with the core faculty and
- staff in 6500 square feet of space in the Medical School Office Building at
- Stanford University School of Medicine. We typically receive 30-40 applications
- per year for 5-7 new positions.
-
- The principal shared computing facilities used by MIS trainees are provided by
- the Center for Advanced Medical Informatics at Stanford (CAMIS). The core CAMIS
- server is a SUN 4/490 that is partially supported by a grant from the National
- Library of Medicine. All students also are provided with advanced personal
- computers or Unix workstations for their research use. Essentially all
- computing facilities at the medical center and computer science department are
- linked together by an ethernet communications network (SUNet) which is also
- connected to most machines on campus and to national academic and research
- communities through gateways to the Internet and BITNET. The network is also
- connected to a variety of servers in the SMI and SSRG offices, including laser
- printers, file servers, and telecommunication gateways.
-
- Several trainees are supported by post-doctoral or pre-doctoral stipends through
- a training grant from the National Library of Medicine. Other trainees,
- including foreign students, tend to be supported by external fellowships or by
- research assistantships provided by their research preceptors.
-
- Applications for admissions to the Stanford training program are due by January
- 1, with decisions announced no later than April 15th. Trainees generally start
- in mid-September at the beginning of a new academic year. To allow physicians
- in training the time to plan ahead for their post-residency fellowships,
- applications are accepted either 9 months or 21 months prior to the anticipated
- September of matriculation.
-
- For brochures, a curriculum description, overviews of current research, and
- information on current and past trainees, send inquiries to the program's
- administrator:
-
- Ms. Darlene Vian
- Section on Medical Informatics
- MSOB X-215, Stanford University School of Medicine
- 300 Pasteur Drive
- Stanford, CA 94305-5479
- (415) 725-3388; Fax: (415) 725-7944
- vian@camis.stanford.edu
-
- References:
-
- Shortliffe, E.H. and Fagan, L.M. Research training in medical informatics: The
- Stanford experience. Academic Medicine 64(10):575-578, October 1989.
-
- Shortliffe, E.H., Perreault, L.E., Wiederhold, G., and Fagan, L.M. Medical
- Informatics: Computer Applications in Health Care. Reading, MA:
- Addison-Wesley, 1990.
-