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Health Science Applications

This presentation will probably involve audience discussion, which will create action items. Use PowerPoint to keep track of these action items during your presentation In Slide Show, click on the right mouse button Select “Meeting Minder” Select the “Action Items” tab

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Health Science Applications

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  1. This presentation will probably involve audience discussion, which will create action items. Use PowerPoint to keep track of these action items during your presentation • In Slide Show, click on the right mouse button • Select “Meeting Minder” • Select the “Action Items” tab • Type in action items as they come up • Click OK to dismiss this box • This will automatically create an Action Item slide at the end of your presentation with your points entered. Health Science Applications Mary Kratz Project Manager, Health Science Initiatives All-Staff Retreat, June 2002

  2. Can you smell the $$$? • Trillion dollar “cottage” industry • NIH primary source of University research funding at $27 billion/year • 1-5% of that $27 billion is IT research • $270,000,000 • NIH envisions IT research growing to 5-10% within 2 years • 10-20% within 5 years

  3. You Do the Math • Average University Medical School has $270,000,000 in research grants and contracts TODAY! • The average medical campus has • $15,000,000 in grants and contracts • ~20 IT focused • 130 Medical Schools are Internet2 members • 130 x 20 = 2,600 grants and contracts

  4. Internet2 Health Sciences • Health Science Applications • Critical Success Factors (CSF) of Health Science Initiative • Organization of Health Science initiative

  5. Applications! *NIH Funded

  6. Distributed Medical Informatics Education Oregon Health & Science University and the University of Pittsburgh • Covers a broad range of fields including electronic medical records and information retrieval • Distance learning provides students with access to faculty, expertise, and other students http://www.ohsu.edu/bicc-informatics/ http://www.cbmi.upmc.edu/

  7. Human Embryo Development George Mason University, Oregon Health & Science University, National Library of Medicine • 3-D visualizations of human embryo development • Doctors can manipulate data remotely • Animations of embryo system development for students http://www.nac.gmu.edu/visembryo.htm http://www.ohsu.edu/chrc/

  8. Renal Physiology Modules Stanford University Virtual Labs Project • Overcomes the limits of one-dimensional mediums to represent dynamic systems of the body. • The modules allow students to integrate and apply their knowledge to real-life problems http://summit.stanford.edu/hhmi

  9. Anatomy and Surgery Workbench and Local NGI Testbed Network Stanford University School of Medicine • Allows students to learn anatomy and practice surgery techniques using 3-D workstations • Network testbed evaluates the effectiveness of workbench applications http://haiti.stanford.edu/~ngi/final/

  10. Surveyor University of Wyoming, Wyoming Department of Health • Web-based research environment integrates rural health data with GIS technology • Support for rural health care practitioners in underserved areas http://www.wims.uwyo.edu/

  11. NLM Testbed for Collaborative Videoconferencing National Library of Medicine • Provides an environment for videoconferencing in distance learning programs • Transmits a variety of medical information, including data from instruments http://tlc.nlm.nih.gov/distancelearningandcollaboration.html

  12. Virtual Pelvic Floor University of Illinois at Chicago • Provides 3-D visualization of complex anatomical structures • Participants use ImmersaDesk™ systems to interact with 3-D anatomical model http://www.sbhis.uic.edu/vrml/Research/PelvicFloor/PelvicFloor.htm

  13. Virtual Aneurysm University of California at Los Angeles • A simulation and virtual reality visualization of brain blood flow • Researchers examine critical flow pattern and evaluate simulated surgical interventions http://www.cs.ucla.edu/~dalee/radsci/

  14. Critical Success Factors • Federal Funding Opportunities • Outreach Activities • Internet2 Days • Professional Societies • Industry Meetings • Continue to develop process models for communities of engagement • Medical Middleware • Internet2 Commons

  15. Critical Success Factors: Federal Funding Opportunities • Federal Funding Opportunities • NLM BAA on “Application of Advanced Network Infrastructure in Health and Disaster Management” • RCMI/IDEA Programs • NIH NCRR SBIR • NLM funding for Privacy Testbed • Medical Informatics Fellowships • NLM survey project with End to End Performance • Corporate Funding Opportunities** • Johnson and Johnson (JNJ) • Pfizer

  16. Critical Success Factors:Outreach Activities • Advanced Technology “Roadshow” • Summer/Fall 2002 • NIH sponsored • Website Update • Summer 2002 • Henry Chou student intern • Radiological Society of North America • December 1-6, 2002 • DHHS Information Technology Modernization Committee • Fall 2002 • National Committee on Health Statistics • July 16, 2002 • SICOT (International Society of Surgery and Traumatology) • August 28-29, 2002 • Institute of Medicine (IOM) • September 18-20, 2002 • Formalize AAMC Collaboration

  17. Outreach Activity Milestones:aka why does Mary travel so much? • Human Resource Roundtable, July 2001 • AVMA Talbot Symposium, July 2001 • NIH Symposium on Component Based Management Systems, July 2001 • Testimony to NCVHS, August 2001 • Telemedicine Symposium, August 2001 • MedInfo 2001, September 2001 • ISO TC215, September 2001. • Internet2 Day Austin, Texas, October 2001 • Security and Privacy Guidelines, October 2001 • Upenn Internet2 Day, November 2001 • FDA Senior Science Board, November 2001 • RSNA, Advanced Technology Tutorial faculty, November 2001 • AMIA/AAMC, November 2001 • Pfizer Internet2 Day, January 2002 • Distributed Medical Intelligence, February 2002 • Internet2 Day at Thomas Jefferson University/MAGPI, March 2002 • Internet2 Day at University of Washington, March 2002 • RCMI Symposium at JSU, April 2002 • NCRR Advisory Council, May 2002

  18. Communities of Engagement: Clinical, Research, Education • Medical & Dental • Clinical Care (Pathology, Radiology, Orthopedic Surgery, Neurology, Dentistry…) • Telemedicine • Public Health Surveillance (Homeland Security, CDC) • Biotechnology • Genomics • Proteinomics • Micro Arrays • ***”omics” • Pharmacy • FDA • Pharmco drug research and development (Pfizer, Adventis, Eli Lilley) • Medical Devices/Remote Instrumentation • Agriculture • Veterinary Medical WG • USDA

  19. Medical Middleware • Leverage developments in “core” middleware • MeduPerson • Middleware Services • Person Identification • Terminology Mediation • Resource Access Decision (Shib) • Information Access Service • Order Entry • Health Information Locator • Gene Sequence Analysis (Decision Support) • Etc.

  20. Internet2 Commons in the Health Sciences • Virtual Tumor Board • Virtual Radiology Board • Veterinary Medical Grand Rounds • Continuing Medical Education; subscription model • Second Opinion Networks • Bio-terrorist nasty of the moment (anthrax, radiation poisoning, small pox…) • Distance Surgery; Haptics • Telemedicine

  21. Organization of Health Science Initiative • Advisory Committee in formation • Physician leadership input to Application Strategy Council • Strategic direction of HS initiative • Leadership Teams • Healthcare • Life Sciences • Operational/procedural responsibilities via Working Group Chairs • Working Groups • Health Sciences WG (Mary Kratz, Chair) • Medical Middleware WG (Jack Buchanan, MD/PhD, Chair) • Veterinary Medical WG (Gary Allen, DVM, Chair) • (Remote Instrumentation) • BioEthics in formation (John Yost, MD, Chair) • Collaborations • Visible Human Project Advanced Technology Demonstrations • RCMI Clinical Trials Research Network • Biomedical Informatics Research Network

  22. www.internet2.edu

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