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- N-1-1-020.15 Biomedicine, by Ted Shortliffe, <ehs@camis.stanford.edu>
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- Although late to join the Internet community, biomedical researchers
- and educators have been increasingly aggressive in their efforts to
- connect to the network and to articulate a vision of what national
- electronic connectivity and information access can mean to both the
- medical practitioner and the biomedical researcher. A recent report
- from the Institute of Medicine ("Computer-Based Patient Records: An
- Essential Technology for Health Care", National Academy Press,
- November 1991) has been particularly explicit about the need for an
- enhanced role of the biomedical community in national network
- planning. Most academic health science institutions are joined to the
- Internet via their main campus computing and communications
- facilities. This has left community hospitals and other nonacademic
- healthcare institutions with a limited understanding of the Internet
- and a simultaneous lack of models for how they might best get
- connected to their regional networks. The National Library of
- Medicine is hoping to address this problem as one aspect of its role
- in the national High Performance Computing initiative.
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- To help address both the clinical and research uses of networking in
- biomedicine, the American Medical Informatics Association (AMIA) has
- identified "Broadband Networks, High Speed LANs and Multimedia" as one
- of the two tracks in its annual Spring Congress to be held at the
- downtown Marriott Hotel in Portland, Oregon from May 7-9, 1992 (the
- second track deals with Decision Support Systems in biomedicine). The
- program chairman for the networking track is Dr. Jerome Cox from
- Washington University (jrc@wucs1.wustl.edu) and more information about
- the meeting may be obtained from the AMIA Offices, 4915 St. Elmo Ave,
- Suite 302, Bethesda, MD 20814 (telephone 301/657-1291 or email to
- mutnik@lhc.nlm.nih.gov). Abstracts are due January 10, 1992 and the
- preliminary program will be available by March 1.
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