| Literature DB >> 30928942 |
Lydia Jidkov1, Matthew Alexander2, Pippa Bark1, John G Williams3,4, Jonathan Kay4, Paul Taylor1, Harry Hemingway1, Amitava Banerjee1,4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess health informatics (HI) training in UK postgraduate medical education, across all specialties, against international standards in the context of UK digital health initiatives (eg, Health Data Research UK, National Health Service Digital Academy and Global Digital Exemplars).Entities:
Keywords: health informatics; information management; information technology
Year: 2019 PMID: 30928942 PMCID: PMC6475211 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-025460
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Scoping review curricula for health informatics competencies for postgraduate doctors
| First author/reference | Year of publication | Country | Curricula type | Target audience | Intended setting | Aims | Methodology |
| Cameron | 1998 | Canada | Clinical | Doctors | Workplace | To initiate a national curriculum in HI. | Small email discussion group of academic clinicians reaching consensus. |
| van Bemmel | 1998 | Netherlands | Academic | Health professionals (undergraduate and postgraduate) | University: undergraduate and postgraduate | To contribute to development of IMIA guidelines for teaching HI. | Report of experience at Erasmus University Rotterdam in implementing guidelines for teaching HI in the Netherlands since 1986. Curricular development based on the Handbook of Medical Informatics |
| Leven | 1998 | Germany | Academic (MSc) | Health and healthcare information technology professionals | University | To provide methodological foundations to prepare graduates for careers in HI in academic, hospital or industrial settings. | Influenced by outcomes of six IMIA conferences in Lyon (1974), Chamonix (1983), Victoria (1989), Prague (1990), and Heidelberg/Heilbronn (1992) and Newcastle (1997), with curriculum recommendations from various organisations. |
| Staggers | 1999 | USA | Clinical | Health and healthcare information technology professionals | Workplace | To develop HI competencies for health and non-health professionals. | 3-day workshop and consensus to build up curriculum iteratively. |
| Gardner | 2001 | USA | Academic | Health professionals | University | To review University of Utah Medical Informatics Research and Training Programme. | Consensus and experience, emphasising in 5 ‘tracks’: |
| Jaspers | 2001 | Netherlands | Academic (MSc) | Undergraduate and postgraduate but not restricted to health professionals | University | To prepare individuals for careers in medical information technology and sciences via MSc in medical information sciences. | Consensus guided by a Steering Committee, with representation from medical biology, clinical medicine, epidemiology, computer science and HI. |
| Covvey | 2001 | Canada | Comprehensive | Health and healthcare information technology professionals | Workplace | To develop HI competencies required in education and practice by health and HIT professionals. | Working group consensus to develop competencies for three groups: Applied Health Informatics professionals, Research and Development Health Informatics professionals and the Clinicians with Health Informatics. |
| Shortliffe | 2002 | USA | Academic (MSc+PhD) | Mainly doctors seeking higher degrees | University | To review research and educational programmes in HI at Columbia University. | Consensus and experience. |
| Haux | 2002 | Germany | Academic (MSc) | Health professionals | University | To train healthcare professionals in HI through an MSc in ‘Health Information Management’ | Review and consensus based on a joint enterprise of the Medical Faculty at the University of Heidelberg and the Department of Medical Informatics at the Heilbronn University of Applied Sciences. |
| Zimmerman | 2003 | USA | Academic | Biomedical informatics professionals | University taught but unsure if workplace focused | To define a curriculum for HI professionals. | Consensus and application of three competency domains: Formal: mathematical and technical methods. Empirical: cognitive, behavioural and organisational aspects of information systems. Applied: formal and empirical domains used to solve problems in biology, physiology and patient care. |
| Garde | 2006 | Australia | Comprehensive | To all professionals in HI | Workplace | To provide guidance for ‘good’ HI education across different roles in HI (users; deployers; and researchers and/or developers). | Consensus. |
| Jaspers | 2007 | Netherlands, USA and Germany | Academic (short course) | Undergraduate and postgraduate doctors | University | To provide guidance on HI training of future physicians. | Experience and consensus from an international summer school in HI in Amsterdam, building on IMIA recommendations. |
| American Health Information Management Association and American Medical Informatics Association | 2008 | USA | Clinical | Health and healthcare information technology professionals | Workplace | To provide core HI competencies for a wide range of professionals in education and practice. | Consensus guideline that produced a core competencies matrix tool. |
| Safran | 2009 | USA | Clinical | Doctors | Workplace | To define a programme for subspecialty in clinical informatics. | Develop curricular content approved by AMIA board of directors through consensus. |
| Gardner | 2009 | USA | Clinical | Doctors | Workplace | To define core content for a clinical informatics physician subspecialty curriculum. | ‘The Core Content for Clinical Informatics’ was developed over 2 years with expert consultation and consensus. |
| Stead | 2011 | USA | Academic | Doctors | University | To provide a framework of core HI competencies for health professionals. | Development by consensus of Informatics Competencies for Future Health Professionals Mapped to the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Core Competencies. |
| Kulikowski | 2012 | USA | Academic | Health and healthcare information technology professionals | University | To develop HI competencies that can be acquired through a variety of different courses or teaching methods. | Consensus via AMIA Academic Forum Committee and influenced by AMIA programme requirements for fellowship education in the subspecialty of clinical informatics. |
| Canada Health Informatics Association | 2012 | Canada | Comprehensive | Health and healthcare information technology professionals | Workplace | To develop HI competencies that can be acquired through a variety of different courses or teaching methods. | Consensus to develop Health Informatics Professional Core Competencies sets. |
| Pageler | 2013 | USA | Clinical | Doctors | Workplace | To integrate HI competencies with postgraduate medical curricula. | Consensus in line with Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Common Programme Requirements. |
| Valerius | 2015 | USA | Academic | Health and healthcare information technology professionals | University | To consolidate competencies for health information management (HIM) and HI. | Comparison and consolidation of predefined curricula competencies between HIM (Commission on Accreditation for Health Informatics and Information Management Education) and HI (American Medical Informatics Association Clinical Informatics). |
| Hersh | 2017 | USA | Clinical+academic | Health and healthcare information technology professionals | Online | To educate health professionals in baseline HI as a distance learning course (the 10×10 programme). | Curricula developed by consensus but established by the affiliated university and must be endorsed by a local or regional IMIA member society. |
HI, health informatics; HIT, healthcare information technology; IMIA, International Medical Informatics Association.
Figure 1Flow diagram of included curricula in scoping review.
Fifty domains of competency in health informatics (from International Medical Informatics Association) including skill level and presence in 71 specialties
| ID | Domain details | Skill level | No. of clinical specialties (%) |
| 1 | Evolution of informatics as a discipline and as a profession. | + | 2 (3) |
| 2 | Need for systematic information processing in healthcare, benefits and constraints of information technology in healthcare. | ++ | 11 (15) |
| 3 | Efficient and responsible use of information processing tools to support healthcare professionals’ practice and their decision making. | ++ | 48 (68) |
| 4 | Use of personal application software for documentation, personal communication including internet access, for publication and basic statistics. | ++ | 50 (70) |
| 5 | Information literacy: library classification and systematic health-related terminologies and their coding, literature retrieval methods, research methods and research paradigms. | ++ | 12 (17) |
| 6 | Characteristics, functionalities and examples of information systems in healthcare (eg, clinical information systems and primary care information systems). | + | 33 (46) |
| 7 | Architectures of information systems in healthcare, approaches and standards for communication and cooperation and for interfacing and integration of component, architectural paradigms (eg, service-oriented architectures). | +++ | 0 (0) |
| 8 | Management of information systems in healthcare (health information management, strategic and tactic information management, IT governance, IT service management, legal and regulatory issues). | + | 10 (14) |
| 9 | Characteristics, functionalities and examples of information systems to support patients and the public (eg, patient-oriented information system architectures and applications, personal health records and sensor-enhanced information systems). | + | 2 (3) |
| 10 | Methods and approaches to regional networking and shared care (eHealth, health telematics applications and interorganisational information exchange). | + | 4 (6) |
| 11 | Appropriate documentation and health data management principles including ability to use health and medical coding systems, construction of health and medical coding systems. | + | 37 (52) |
| 12 | Structure, design and analysis principles of the health record including notions of data quality, minimum data sets, architecture and general applications of the electronic patient record/electronic health record. | + | 4 (6) |
| 13 | Socio-organisationalorganisational and sociotechnical issues, including workflow/process modelling and reorganisation. | + | 0 (0) |
| 14 | Principles of data representation and data analysis using primary and secondary data sources, principles of data mining, data warehouses and knowledge management. | + | 13 (18) |
| 15 | Biomedical modelling and simulation. | +++ | 0 (0) |
| 16 | Ethical and security issues including accountability of healthcare providers and managers and BMHI specialists and the confidentiality, privacy and security of patient data. | + | 17 (24) |
| 17 | Nomenclatures, vocabularies, terminologies, ontologies and taxonomies in Biomedical Health Informatics. | + | 0 (0) |
| 18 | Informatics methods and tools to support education (including flexible and distance learning), use of relevant educational technologies, including internet and world wide web. | +++ | 7 (10) |
| 19 | Evaluation and assessment of information systems, including study design, selection and triangulation of (quantitative and qualitative) methods, outcome and impact evaluation, economic evaluation, unintended consequences, systematic reviews and meta-analysis, and evidence-based health informatics. | +++ | 4 (6) |
| 20 | Principles of clinical/medical decision making and diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. | + | 0 (0) |
| 21 | Organisation of health institutions and of the overall health system, interorganisational aspects and shared care. | + | 5 (7) |
| 22 | Policy and regulatory frameworks for information handling data in healthcare. | +++ | 4 (6) |
| 23 | Principles of evidence-based practice (evidence-based medicine, evidence-based nursing …). | + | 17 (24) |
| 24 | Health administration, health economics, health quality management and resource management, patient safety initiatives, public health services and outcome measurement. | + | 26 (37) |
| 25 | Basic informatics terminology like data, information, knowledge, hardware, software, computer, networks, information systems and information systems management. | + | 0 (0) |
| 26 | Basic IT skills: ability to use personal computers, text processing and spread sheet software and easy-to-use database management systems and ability to communicate electronically, including electronic data exchange, with other healthcare professionals, and internet/intranet use. | ++ | 53 (75) |
| 27 | Methods of practical informatics/computer science, especially on programming languages, software engineering, data structures, database management systems, information and system modelling tools, information systems theory and practice, knowledge engineering, (concept) representation and acquisition, and software architectures. | +++ | 0 (0) |
| 28 | Methods of theoretical informatics/computer science, for example, complexity theory and encryption/security. | +++ | 0 (0) |
| 29 | Methods of technical informatics/computer science, for example, network architectures and topologies, telecommunications, wireless technology, virtual reality and multimedia. | +++ | 1 (1) |
| 30 | Methods of interfacing and integration of information system components in healthcare, interfacing standards and dealing with multiple patient identifiers. | +++ | 0 (0) |
| 31 | Handling of the information system life cycle: analysis, requirement specification, implementation and/or selection of information systems, risk management and user training. | + | 4 (6) |
| 32 | Methods of project management and change management (ie, project planning, resource management, team management, conflict management, collaboration and motivation, change theories and change strategies). | + | 0 (0) |
| 33 | Mathematics: algebra, analysis, logic, numerical mathematics, probability theory and statistics, and cryptography. | +++ | 0 (0) |
| 34 | Biometry, epidemiology and health research methods, including study design. | +++ | 0 (0) |
| 35 | Methods for decision support and their application to patient management, acquisition, representation and engineering of medical knowledge; construction and use of clinical pathways and guidelines. | + | 2 (3) |
| 36 | Basic concepts and applications of ubiquitous computing (eg, pervasive, sensor-based and ambient technologies in healthcare, health-enabling technologies, ubiquitous health systems and ambient assisted living). | +++ | 2 (3) |
| 37 | Usability engineering, human–computer interaction, usability evaluation and cognitive aspects of information. | +++ | 0 (0) |
| 38 | Biomedical imaging and signal processing. | +++ | 5 (7) |
| 39 | Clinical/medical bioinformatics and computational biology. | +++ | 0 (0) |
| 40 | Health-enabling technologies, ubiquitous health systems and ambient assisted living. | +++ | 2 (3) |
| 41 | Health information sciences. | +++ | 0 (0) |
| 42 | Medical chemoinformatics. | +++ | 0 (0) |
| 43 | Medical nanoinformatics. | +++ | 0 (0) |
| 44 | Medical robotics (including AI/expert systems). | +++ | 0 (0) |
| 45 | Public health informatics. | +++ | 0 (0) |
| 46 | International developments. | ++ | 0 (0) |
| 47 | Medical Physics | +++ | 0 (0) |
| 48 | Informatics teaching. | +++ | 7 (10) |
| 49 | ‘Employ new technologies appropriately, including information technology’ (in all General Surgery Curricula). | + | 42 (59) |
| 50 | Proactive approach to new technology (in Clinical Radiology Curriculum). | + | 25 (35) |
Skill levels:
Introductory (+) competencies for novices in BMHI.
Intermediate (++) competencies for proficient learners in BMHI.
Advanced (+++) competencies for specialist knowledge in BMHI.
BMHI, Biomedical Health Informatics.
Figure 2Proportion of 50 health informatics competency domains mapped in postgraduate medical curricula of 71 specialities.
Figure 3Universal health informatics competency domains developed iteratively by scoping review, curricular content analysis and expert consultation.