Archive for the 'health' Category

Using Big Data to Improve Healthcare Services | Tiranee Achalakul | TEDxChiangMai

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https://www.ted.com/tedx/events/24878
http://www.bigdataexperience.org Dr. Tiranee Achalakul (ดร. ธีรณี อจลากุล) has worked in the fields of big data analytics, high performance computing, and software engineering since 2000. She has wide experience working with both the IT industry and in academia in the United States and Thailand in fields such as design and implementation of data methodologies, software systems and computing infrastructure; she has published two textbooks and multiple journal and conference papers.

During the past 14 years, Dr. Tiranee Achalakul has been participating in many data analytics and software development projects in the private and public sectors and has served on advisory boards for multiple agencies and on the committee of the National e-Science Infrastructure Consortium of Thailand. In addition to being Assistant President in Innovation and Partnership with the King Mongkut University of Technology Thonburi, she is Director of the Big Data Experience Center and the KMUTT student incubator (Hatch). This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx
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UGM 2021 | Panel Discussion: Challenges & Opportunities of Setting up a Data Infrastructure

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The complexities of managing and delivering value from high throughput multi-omics data far outpace traditional approaches to IT infrastructure. Thus, building a robust, centralized ecosystem that ingests, stores & pre-processes these data for downstream ML applications becomes critical. Join our panel of industry experts as they make a case for strategic investments in biomedical data management and shed light on the challenges of building a data infrastructure from the ground up.

Talk to us for a personalized walkthrough on how we help data-driven drug discovery teams get to faster actionable insights: https://elucidata.io/schedule-a-meeting/
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Health Information Exchange (HIE) is one of the most complex data systems in health care. Most HIEs are working to meet the challenge of streamlining data to create insights and support various stakeholders in their community around population health initiatives. Join speakers Jaime Bland, CEO of NeHII (Nebraska Health Information Initiative), one of the most advanced HIEs with a bold vision around HIEs as the enabler of population health through aligning HIE data to value based care, alternative payment model infrastructure and population health analytics, and Vineeth Yeddula, CEO of KPI Ninja, who has enabled NEHII to operationlize this vision by collaborating with NeHII. During this webinar, you will learn how using advanced analytics is revolutionizing this space by delivering insights in easing the burden for payors and providers as well as accelerating the improvement of outcomes. You’ll discover the unique approach to leverage existing data sources and design a population health analytics roadmap and improve the clinical outcomes that are aligned to value-based financial reimbursement.

DAY 1: Maintaining the Robust Health of Aging People

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Session 2: Maintaining the Robust Health of Aging People

Panelists:

Alex Ezeh, Dornsife Professor of Global Health, Drexel University, USA

Ursula Staudinger, Professor of Sociomedical Sciences, Columbia University, USA

Peng Du, Vice President, Renmin University, China

Alana Officer, Senior Health Adviser, World Health Organization, Switzerland

Turkey relies on its robust health care system

Instead of taking draconian measures or ignoring the problem, Turkey relies on its robust health care system and talented medics to stop the pandemic.

At the same time, we supply test kits to our friends and allies.

Because no virus is more durable than the measures we take.
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Spotlight on Free Software Building Blocks for a Secure Health Data Infrastructure

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by Markus Suhr and Marcel Parciak

At: FOSDEM 2020

Health Data is traditionally held and processed in large and complex mazes of hospital information systems. The market is dominated by vendors offering monolithic and proprietary software due to the critical nature of the supported processes and – in some cases – due to legal requirements. The “digital transformation”, “big data” and “artificial intelligence” are some of the hypes that demand for improved exchange of health care data in routine health care and medical research alike. Exchanging data at these scales requires open data formats and protocols, multi-stakeholder collaboration, and agile development. As an example, the de-facto messaging standard organization in medicine HL7 noticed a much more positive response from the medical research community regarding their openly available FHIR specification in comparison to the for-members-only and XML-based HL7v3 messaging standard specification.
While some past (or rather: ongoing) projects on a national scale in the German health care system have tried centralized, top-down specification and development approaches, more recent infrastructure projects embrace the competitive collaboration of a decentralized, bottom-up strategy. As a result, importance and recognition of free software increase in the Medical Informatics research community.

In a series of rapid spotlights, we present tools and frameworks that serve as cornerstones for the envisioned health data exchange infrastructure, including: Organization and collaboration tools; data extraction from clinical source systems, data transformation and de-identification; data management systems and long-term archival using persistent globally-unique object identifiers; federated queries across multiple independently managed clinical data integration centers.

We aim to encourage participants to actively add tools and frameworks within the discussion and highlight their experiences and challenges with using open systems in Medical Informatics.
❮h3❯Speaker bio:❮/h3❯

Marcel Parciak and Markus Suhr are research associates at the University Medical Center Göttingen (UMG), Department of Medical Informatics.

Marcel graduated the Göttingen Medical Informatics Master program in 2018 and is currently a PhD student, investigating the challenges of data provenance in medical research. He is a system architect for the HiGHmed project that facilitates innovative federated infrastructure for cross-organisational secondary use of health care data.

Markus started his professional career in 2014 as a system administrator and software developer at the UMG hospital data center. He joined the Department of Medical Informatics in 2017, becoming lead developer for a free software project and working on multiple biomedical research projects. Since 2019 he is technical lead for the newly created Medical Data Integration Center. Markus is a supporter of the Free Software Foundation Europe.

Room: AW1.126
Scheduled start: 2020-02-01 11:00:00
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The Path To Robust Health⚕️💓

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Song: LAKEY INSPIRED – Chill Day (Vlog No Copyright Music)
Music provided by Vlog No Copyright Music.
Video Link: https://youtu.be/vtHGESuQ22s
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AWS re:Invent 2020: Make sense of health data with Amazon HealthLake

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Over the past decade, we’ve witnessed a digital transformation in healthcare, with organizations capturing huge volumes of patient information. But this data is often unstructured and difficult to extract, with information trapped in clinical notes, insurance claims, recorded conversations, and more. In this session, explore how the new Amazon HealthLake service removes the heavy lifting of organizing, indexing, and structuring patient information to provide a complete view of each patient’s health record in the FHIR standard format. Come learn how to use prebuilt machine learning models to analyze and understand relationships in the data, identify trends, and make predictions, ultimately delivering better care for patients.

Learn more about re:Invent 2020 at http://bit.ly/3c4NSdY

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Why the historic environment needs a Spatial Data infrastructure

The INSPIRE Directive (2007) mandates European Union countries to share environmentally related datasets so that they can be easily accessed by other public organisations within their own and neighbouring countries to inform policies or activities that may impact on the environment. Key to delivering INSPIRE is the establishment of Spatial Data Infrastructures (SDIs) providing frameworks for coordinating the policies, infrastructure and standards needed to acquire, process, distribute, use, maintain and preserve spatial data through discovery, view and download services by 2020.
Archaeological information is inherently spatial yet, despite the environmental focus of INSPIRE, guidance is limited and ambiguous for archaeological datasets and consequentially there is limited engagement from data curators. Although Protected Sites is an INSPIRE theme does it cover only those formally designated through legislation or include sites managed through legal or other effective means?
INSPIRE publishes data to help inform environmental policies and if data is unpublished there is a risk it will simply be ignored. Complex modelling of environmental change through Ecosystem Services remotely consuming web services is already happening but the lack of published reference datasets from the historic environment compromises consideration of the resource in decision making processes.
Development of SDIs for heritage can bring wider benefits for the profession. Too often fieldwork extents and results are confined to paper publications or reside in project archives. Consequentially we lack a spatial record of fieldwork activities. Although cultural heritage data often has a strong spatial component, the full potential of the geographies created through discovery, recording and analysis is far from being realised. Harmonisation and publication of spatial data to consistent standards through an SDI is an essential pre-requisite for mainstreaming the use of heritage data in 21st century to get cultural heritage to work for Europe.

Peter McKeague (Historic Environment Scotland), Anthony Corns (The Discovery Programme), Axel Posluschny (University of Bamberg)
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Robust Healthcare Process Improvements – Dr. Mark Chassin

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Visit us at http://nextlevel.gehealthcare.com

Dr. Mark Chassin, president of the Joint Commission, discussed his organization’s new “robust process improvement” (RPI) tools. Though the Joint Commission will not require healthcare organizations to adopt the tools, “we expect that when they see how effective they are they will want to use them,” Chassin said. The tools are created by measuring the magnitude of a healthcare organization’s problem and examining why the process is failing; then the Joint Commission translates those learnings into actionable interventions that can be applied to other medical organizations as well.

The Commission’s new “Center for Transforming Healthcare” will house the effort, which, Chassin said, responds directly to what its customers have demanded: not only identification of problems, but the tools to address them.

Content-rich resources focused on helping you discover better ways to control costs, lead and strategize, improve quality and safety, and increase capacity. With a constant stream of fresh ideas, in-depth information and inspiration, our goal is to be your knowledge service as you guide your organization to the next level. Visit us at http://nextlevel.gehealthcare.com

Dr Devi Shetty, Chairman and Executive Director, Narayana Health touches upon plethora of issues pertaining to healthcare sector with Prathiba Raju, Senior Content Specialist. He highlights about the role of technology imbibed by Narayana Health.

Robust Meaning

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Video shows what robust means. Evincing strength; indicating vigorous health; strong; sinewy; muscular; vigorous; sound; as, a robust body; robust youth; robust health.. Violent; rough; rude.. Requiring strength or vigor; as, robust employment.. robust pronunciation. How to pronounce, definition by Wiktionary dictionary. robust meaning. Powered by MaryTTS
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INTRINSEQUE HEALTH BUILDING A ROBUST CLINICAL SUPPLY PLAN

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INTRINSEQUE HEALTH BUILDING A ROBUST CLINICAL SUPPLY PLAN

Intrinseque Health, is a, EN ISO 13485 certified, Quality Driven, Project Management-based, Global Drug Development Support organization, specialising in Clinical Supply Chain solutions.

Intrinseque Health is an expert in solving supply chain challenges like, product availability and lead time, selecting in-country sourcing or import, import regulations and IOR requirements, storage, installation, calibration, validation, servicing & maintenance of equipment and supplies. Intrinseque Health engages early with its clients to ensure each supply plan is pressure tested, as the smallest flaw in the strategy may result in study delay or even loss of patient. Every item, no matter how big or small, needs to be available at site at the time pf patient visit.

Importance of building a robust clinical supply plan for a clinical trial is often underestimated – Product Availability, Lead Times, Import Regulations, IQ, OQ, PQ, Equipment Maintenance, Importer of Records, Anti-Corruption Laws are only a few factors that need to be taken into account while building a successful supply plan.

Intrinseque Health is a Quality Driven, Project Management-based, Global Drug Development Support Organization that specializes in Clinical Supply Chain solutions.

We are experts in solving supply chain challenges like, product availability and lead time, selecting in-country sourcing or import, import regulations and IOR capabilities, installation, calibration, validation, servicing & maintenance of equipment and supplies.
At Intrinseque Health, we engage early with our clients to ensure each supply plan is pressure tested, as the smallest flaw in the strategy may result in study delay or even loss of patient. Every item, no matter how big or small, needs to be available at site at the time pf patient visit.

Maintenance of distribution data & records due to recent anti-corruption enforcement activities in developing countries had made Returns, Reclamation & Destruction of Unutilized Supplies and Equipment, more important than ever. Intrinseque Health ensures adherence to all local & international regulations and considers all dynamics & characteristics of every region & country involved in the study.

Restrictions in free flow of timely delivery of shipments and enrolled patient’s visits to sites due to the COVID-19 situation, have made it difficult for clinical supplies to reach the patients. Intrinseque Health offers Direct-to-Patient services.
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Robust healthcare system

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A mobile app designed to connect Health professionals to a vast community of health lovers
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