Literature DB >> 17901617

Semantic interoperability between clinical and public health information systems for improving public health services.

Diego M Lopez1, Bernd G M E Blobel.   

Abstract

Improving public health services requires comprehensively integrating all services including medical, social, community, and public health ones. Therefore, developing integrated health information services has to start considering business process, rules and information semantics of involved domains. The paper proposes a business and information architecture for the specification of a future-proof national integrated system, concretely the requirements for semantic integration between public health surveillance and clinical information systems. The architecture is a semantically interoperable approach because it describes business process, rules and information semantics based on national policy documents and expressed in a standard language such us the Unified Modeling Language UML. Having the enterprise and information models formalized, semantically interoperable Health IT components/services development is supported.

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17901617

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stud Health Technol Inform        ISSN: 0926-9630


  4 in total

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Authors:  Ian Painter; Debra Revere; P Joseph Gibson; Janet Baseman
Journal:  Online J Public Health Inform       Date:  2017-09-08

Review 2.  Visualization and analytics tools for infectious disease epidemiology: a systematic review.

Authors:  Lauren N Carroll; Alan P Au; Landon Todd Detwiler; Tsung-Chieh Fu; Ian S Painter; Neil F Abernethy
Journal:  J Biomed Inform       Date:  2014-04-16       Impact factor: 6.317

3.  Notifiable condition reporting practices: implications for public health agency participation in a health information exchange.

Authors:  Debra Revere; Rebecca H Hills; Brian E Dixon; P Joseph Gibson; Shaun J Grannis
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2017-03-11       Impact factor: 3.295

4.  The ALFA (Activity Log Files Aggregation) toolkit: a method for precise observation of the consultation.

Authors:  Simon de Lusignan; Pushpa Kumarapeli; Tom Chan; Bernhard Pflug; Jeremy van Vlymen; Beryl Jones; George K Freeman
Journal:  J Med Internet Res       Date:  2008-09-08       Impact factor: 5.428

  4 in total

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