Literature DB >> 12810121

Open Source software in medical informatics--why, how and what.

Clement J McDonald1, Gunther Schadow, Michael Barnes, Paul Dexter, J Marc Overhage, Burke Mamlin, J Michael McCoy.   

Abstract

'Open Source' is a 20-40 year old approach to licensing and distributing software that has recently burst into public view. Against conventional wisdom this approach has been wildly successful in the general software market--probably because the openness lets programmers the world over obtain, critique, use, and build upon the source code without licensing fees. Linux, a UNIX-like operating system, is the best known success. But computer scientists at the University of California, Berkeley began the tradition of software sharing in the mid 1970s with BSD UNIX and distributed the major internet network protocols as source code without a fee. Medical informatics has its own history of Open Source distribution: Massachusetts General's COSTAR and the Veterans Administration's VISTA software have been distributed as source code at no cost for decades. Bioinformatics, our sister field, has embraced the Open Source movement and developed rich libraries of open-source software. Open Source has now gained a tiny foothold in health care (OSCAR GEHR, OpenEMed). Medical informatics researchers and funding agencies should support and nurture this movement. In a world where open-source modules were integrated into operational health care systems, informatics researchers would have real world niches into which they could engraft and test their software inventions. This could produce a burst of innovation that would help solve the many problems of the health care system. We at the Regenstrief Institute are doing our part by moving all of our development to the open-source model.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12810121     DOI: 10.1016/s1386-5056(02)00104-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Med Inform        ISSN: 1386-5056            Impact factor:   4.046


  13 in total

1.  A geographical information system using the Google Map API for guidance to referral hospitals.

Authors:  Shinji Kobayashi; Tetsushi Fujioka; Yuji Tanaka; Michiyoshi Inoue; Yoshiyuki Niho; Akira Miyoshi
Journal:  J Med Syst       Date:  2009-06-26       Impact factor: 4.460

2.  E-health integration and interoperability based on open-source information technology.

Authors:  Dejan Dinevski; Andrea Poli; Ivan Krajnc; Olga Sustersic; Tanja Arh
Journal:  Wien Klin Wochenschr       Date:  2010-05       Impact factor: 1.704

3.  End-user support for primary care electronic medical records: a qualitative case study of users' needs, expectations and realities.

Authors:  Aviv Shachak; Catherine Montgomery; Rustam Dow; Jan Barnsley; Karen Tu; Alejandro R Jadad; Louise Lemieux-Charles
Journal:  Health Syst (Basingstoke)       Date:  2013-11-01

4.  Anatomy of an Extensible Open Source PACS.

Authors:  Frederico Valente; Luís A Bastião Silva; Tiago Marques Godinho; Carlos Costa
Journal:  J Digit Imaging       Date:  2016-06       Impact factor: 4.056

5.  Exploring and developing consumer health vocabularies.

Authors:  Qing T Zeng; Tony Tse
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2005-10-12       Impact factor: 4.497

6.  A study of clinically related open source software projects.

Authors:  Michael A Hogarth; Stuart Turner
Journal:  AMIA Annu Symp Proc       Date:  2005

7.  MIMI: multimodality, multiresource, information integration environment for biomedical core facilities.

Authors:  Jacek Szymanski; David L Wilson; Guo-Qiang Zhang
Journal:  J Digit Imaging       Date:  2007-11-13       Impact factor: 4.056

8.  Barriers to open source software adoption in Quebec's health care organizations.

Authors:  Guy Paré; Michael D Wybo; Charles Delannoy
Journal:  J Med Syst       Date:  2009-02       Impact factor: 4.460

9.  Open source challenges for hospital information system (HIS) in developing countries: a pilot project in Mali.

Authors:  Cheick-Oumar Bagayoko; Jean-Charles Dufour; Saad Chaacho; Omar Bouhaddou; Marius Fieschi
Journal:  BMC Med Inform Decis Mak       Date:  2010-04-16       Impact factor: 2.796

10.  Open source, open standards, and health care information systems.

Authors:  Carl J Reynolds; Jeremy C Wyatt
Journal:  J Med Internet Res       Date:  2011-02-17       Impact factor: 5.428

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