Tuesday 25 April
TUESDAY 25 APRIL |
||||||||||||
Exchange Auditorium | Exchange 1 | Exchange 2 | Exchange 3 | Exchange 4 | Exchange 5 | Exchange 6 | Exchange 7 | Exchange 9 | Exchange 10 | |||
08:30 | Keynote Plenary: Machine learning meets behavioural science: The Human Behaviour-Change Project Susan Michie, Professor of Health Psychology, University College London, UK |
|||||||||||
09:30 | Knowledge discovery from routinely collected data Read More Parallel 31 Knowledge discovery from routinely collected data09:30 – 09:45 A UK data discovery lattice Veal C, Thangavelu D, Beck T, Ladas V, Chrysostomou C, Lancaster O, Brookes A 09:45 – 10:00 Associations between diagnostic route and care experience for patients with colorectal cancer: Evidence from linked data Salika T, Abel G, Mendonca S, Von Wagner C, Renzi C, Herbert A, McPhail S, Lyratzopoulos G 10:00 – 10:15 Serotonin reuptake inhibitor use and mortality in epilepsy: findings from a contemporary linked electronic health records cohort study Josephson C, Gonzalez-Izquierdo A, Denaxas S, Fitzpatrick N, Jette N, Sajobi T, Patten S, Engbers J, Wiebe S 10:15 – 10:30 Trends in socio-demographic inequalities in the risk of a cancer diagnosis through emergency presentation: Evidence from population based data, 2006-13 Herbert A, Abel G, Johnson S, Lyratzopoulos G 10:30 – 10:45 Adversity and risk of poor birth and infant outcomes for young mothers: a population-based data linkage cohort study Harron K, Gilbert R, Oddie S, Cromwell D, van der Meulen J 10:45 – 11:00 A standardised and data quality assessed maternal-child care integrated data repository for research and monitoring of best practices: a pilot project in Spain Sáez C, Moner D, García-de-León Chocano R, Muñoz-Soler V, García-de- León González R, Maldonado JA, Bosca Tomas D, Tortajada S, Robles, Viejo M, Garcia-Gomez JM, Alcaraz M, Serrano P, Bernal JL, Rodríguez J, Bustos G, Esparza M |
Data quality assessment methods Read More Parallel 32 Data quality assessment methods09:30 – 09:45 Web validation service for ensuring the quality of medical imaging data Silva JM, Marques Godinho T, Silva D, Costa C 09:45 – 10:00 An automated technique for assessing inpatient administrative health data quality – development and validation Peng M, Quan H, Williamson T 10:00 – 10:15 Misclassification of glucocorticoid use within UK primary care electronic health records Joseph R, van Staa T, Abrahamowicz M, Dixon W 10:15 – 10:30 Development of a data quality taxonomy: case study with an anaesthesia database Lamer A, Degoul S, Périchon R, Soula J, Marcilly R |
Workshop Extracting evidence from clinical free text Read More Parallel 33 Workshop: Extracting evidence from clinical free text: opportunities and challengesFree text remains the main means of communication within healthcare, with its written accounts becoming increasingly available in an electronic form. The capacity to effectively utilise free text to extract evidence to support clinical practice and epidemiological research is lagging behind structured and coded information, while arguably it contains the vast majority of actionable information. The workshop will bring together representatives of several European networks to identify and discuss key opportunities and challenges in clinical text analytics, focusing on technical, ethical and legal barriers and unmet needs across Europe, and aligning those with other efforts in healthcare sciences. Organisers Dr Goran Nenadic; The University of Manchester, Health eResearch Centre, Farr Institute Professor Robert Stewart; King’s College London Dr Johannes Starlinger; Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin Dr Sumithra Velupillai; KTH |
Panel m-Health: From research to records to real people Read More Parallel 34 Panel: mHealth: From research to records to real peopleWith the ability to combine passively and actively collected health information, wearable and smartphone technologies present the possibility to revolutionise how we understand and manage health. Our chosen panel will provide a dynamic insight in to the application of mHealth and wearable technology in the field of Dementias and mental health, highlighting current studies, cutting edge new technology and patient benefits along with discussion in to linking this through to routine health data Panellists Chair: Charlotte Stockton-Powdrell; Senior Project Manager at the University of Manchester: Professor Shôn Lewis; Professor of Adult Psychiatry at the University of Manchester: ClinTouch - Digital self management and early intervention for people with psychosis; randomised controlled evidence. Dr Sandra Bucci; Clinical Psychologist and Senior Lecturer at the University of Manchester: Actissist - Using mobile technology to deliver cognitive behaviour therapy for psychosis Matthew Machin; mHealth Applications Manager at the University of Manchester Dementias Platform UK study – Utilising cutting edge technology to speed up progress in dementias research Dr Hester Ward; Consultant in Public Health Medicine, Information Services Division of NHS National Services Scotland and Honorary Reader at the University of Edinburgh: Exploring the integration of mobile collected patient information into the standard electronic health record system Chris Etchells; Director KMS New technology, data donation and permissions - Its potential ability to change the future of healthcare services |
Workshop Activating and motivating students in online courses of health informatics Read More Parallel 35 Workshop: Activating and motivating students in online courses of health informaticsOnline learning offers many advantages such as self-directed and self-paced learning as well as learning “anywhere” and “anytime”. However, online learning also poses several challenges such as time management and self-discipline. The online teacher thus has to carefully plan how to activate and motivate the students, to facilitate learning and retention. In this workshop, we will discuss frameworks and techniques from the field of instructional design to activate and motivate students in online courses. We will draw both from literature as well as from own experiences in conducting online courses in health informatics at three European universities. Organisers Prof Elske Ammenwerth, UMIT – University for Health Sciences, Medical Informatics and Technology Prof Nicolet de Keizer, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam Prof Sabine Koch, Karolinska Institute |
Clinical decision support systems Read More Parallel 36 Clinical decision support systems09:30 – 09:45 Clinical decision support for diabetes in Scotland: evaluation of clinical processes and outcomes Conway N, Cunningham S, Wales A, Wake D 09:45 – 10:00 A protocol for integrating between decision support systems and electronic health records Mahmoud S, Curcin V, Corrigan D, Delaney B 10:00 – 10:15 Using the MRC framework for complex interventions to develop clinical decision support: a case study Dowding D, Lichtner V, Closs J 10:15 – 10:30 A decision support system for cardiac disease diagnosis based on machine learning methods Gharehbaghi A, Lindén M, Babic A 10:30 – 10:45 Severity summarisation and just in time alert computation in mhealth monitoring Pathinarupothi RK, Alangot B, Rangan E |
Quality assessment & improvement Read More Parallel 37 Quality assessment and improvement09:30 – 09:45 Validation and psychometric analysis of a questionnaire for measuring teleconsultation services quality from the patients´ perspective Tensen E, Thijssing L, Jaspers M 09:45 – 10:00 Evaluation approach for the diabetes digital coach NHS testbed project Benson T, Dawson T, Goodman M, Jenkins M, Dymond E, Lester-George A, Parker T, McEwan P, Tweddell S 10:00 – 10:15 National therapeutic indicators for Scotland – a retrospective analysis (NTIS – RA) MacBride-Stewart S, Marwick C, Hurding S, Guthrie B 10:15 – 10:30 Using informatics to improve the quality of kidney disease management in primary care Xu G, Major R, Shepherd D, Brunskill N 10:30 – 10:45 Square² – A web application for data monitoring in epidemiological and clinical studies Schmidt CO, Krabbe C, Schössow J, Albers M, Henke J, Radke D 10:45 – 11:00 Exploring the notion of hazards for health IT Habli I, White S, Harrison S, Pujara M |
Cross‑centre research using anonymised person‑based data Read More Parallel 38 Workshop: Informing solutions to enable cross-centre researchThe session will focus on challenges and approaches in cross-centre research using anonymised person-based data in safe havens to inform solutions so that such research can take place safely. It invites an international group of multidisciplinary participants to come together for an opportunity to contribute their expertise to the discussion on the barriers, pitfalls, drivers and examples of good practice in cross-centre research. If you want to participate in this workshop, please share examples from your own experience with the organisers:
Please send this to Kerina Jones in advance of the workshop. Organisers Dr Kerina Jones, Swansea University Ms Sharon Heys, Swansea University Dr Helen Daniels, Swansea University |
Childrens’ and adolescents’ health Read More Parallel 39 Children's and adolescents' health09:30 – 09:45 The prevalence of adverse childhood experiences in the general population of Scottish children in the first eight years of life: identification through a birth cohort study Marryat L, Frank J 09:45 – 10:00 Disparities in the prevalence of autism spectrum disorder in Western Australia: opportunities for intervention in Aboriginal children and all children from regional and remote areas Fairthorne J, Leonard H, Bourke J, de Klerk N, Whitehouse A, Shepherd C 10:00 – 10:15 Using linked cohort and health records to investigate emotional and behavioural difficulties in early childhood and risk of injury in early adolescence Bandyopadhyay A, Tingay K, Griffiths L, Akbari A, Bedford H, Cortina, Borja M, Walton S, Dezateux C, Brophy S, Lyons R 10:15 – 10:30 Investigating educational attainment at age 16yrs in adolescents who are looked after or in need using record linkage and a birth cohort study Teyhan A, Boyd A, Macleod J 10:30 – 10:45 Towards safe and efficient child primary care – gaps in the use of unique identifiers in Europe Kühne G, Rigby MJ, Majeed A, Blair ME 10:45 – 11:00 Why are children’s interests invisible in European national eHealth strategies? Kühne G, Rigby MJ, Majeed A, Blair ME |
Terminological systems Read More Parallel 40 Terminological systems09:30 – 09:45 Clinical code set management: A review of methods reported in the literature Williams R, Kontopantelis E, Buchan I, Peek N 09:45 – 10:00 HL7 FHIR: ontological reinterpretation of medication resources Martínez-Costa C, Schulz S 10:00 – 10:15 Communication of child symptoms in emergency: classification of the terminology Rochat J, Siebert J, Galetto A, Lovis C, Ehrler F 10:15 – 10:30 SNOMED CT as reference terminology in the Danish national home care documentation standard Gøeg KR, Elberg P, Højen AR, Eskildsen UL 10:30 – 10:45 Piloting a collaborative web-based system for testing ICD-11 Donada M, Kostanjsek N, Della Mea V, Celik C, Jakob R 10:45 – 11:00 A terminology in general practice / family medicine to represent nonclinical aspects for various usages: the Q-Codes Jamoulle M, Grosjean J, Resnick M, Ittoo A, Treuherz A, Vander Stichele R, Cardillo E, Darmoni S, Shamenek F, Vanmeerbeek M |
||
11:00 | Coffee Break – Exchange Hall | |||||||||||
11:30 | Farr institute annual meeting Read More Parallel 41 Farr institute annual meetingPowering Population Health Science with Informatics Professor Iain Buchan, Farr Institute, Health eResearch Centre Understanding and Improving Complex Interventions through Linked Data Dr Sarah Rodgers, Farr Institute, CIPHER Exploring Infant Outcomes and Service Provision at an International Scale with Administrative Data Dr Katie Harron, Farr Institute, London Rethinking Trajectories of Child BMI: Communities Inviting Data Science Dr Lamiece Hassan, Farr Institute, Health eResearch Centre Novel Computational Methods to Enrich Research with Routine Healthcare Data Dr Spiros Denexas, Farr Institute, London Understanding Kidney Function across Time, Place and Person Professor Corri Black, Farr Institute, Scotland UK Health Data Analytics Roadmap Dr Niels Peek, Farr Institute, Health eResearch Centre Health Data Research UK Professor Andrew Morris, Farr Institute, Scotland |
Interactive and visualisation tools for health data Read More Parallel 42 Interactive and visualisation tools for health data11:30 – 11:45 Application of correspondence analysis to graphically investigate associations between foods and eating locations Chapman A, Beh E, Palla L 11:45 – 12:00 Data driven quality improvement of health professions education: Design and development of CLUE – an interactive curriculum data visualisation tool Canning CA, Loe A, Gangnon P, Zary N 12:00 – 12:15 The health data ingestion stack Sinaci AA, Laleci Erturkmen GB, NAMLI T 12:15 – 12:30 Developing healthcare data analytics apps with open data science tools Hao B, Sun W, Yu Y, Xie G 12:30 – 12:45 Envisioning data science for health services research Stukel T, Austin P, Azimaee M, Bronskill S, Guttmann A, Paterson M, Schull M, Sutradhar R, Victor JC |
Electronic phenotyping Read More Parallel 43 Electronic Phenotyping11:30 – 11:45 Which variables are useful for phenotyping dementia in primary care records? A meta-analysis Ford E, Greenslade N, Rooney P, Paudyal P, Oliver S, Cassell J 11:45 – 12:00 Fast and efficient feature engineering for multi-cohort analysis of EHR data Ozery-Flato M, Yanover C, Gottlieb A, Weissbrod O, Parush N, Goldschmidt Y 12:00 – 12:15 Assessing the robustness of an electronic phenotyping algorithm using EHR data to identify episodes of acute kidney injury across health care settings Sawhney S, Robinson H, Chess J, Fraser S, Hounkpatin H, Peek N, Scale T, van der Veer S, Black C 12:15 – 12:30 Profiling primary care patients on sub-domains of frailty using the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD) Pye S, Kontopantelis E, Van Marwijk H, Ashcroft D, Clegg A, Reeves D 12:30 – 12:45 Multimorbidity patterns in older adults: An analysis of the UK Biobank data Dhalwani N, Zemedikun D, Gray L, Davies M, Kunti K 12:45 – 13:00 Evolution of IgE responses to multiple allergen components throughout childhood Howard R, Belgrave D, Papastamoulis P, Simpson A, Rattray M, Custovic A |
Panel IoT for smart, healthy cities Read More Parallel 44 Panel: Internet of Things for smart, healthy citiesCityVerve, the UK Internet of Things city demonstrator, brings together the brightest minds to create a blueprint for smart cities worldwide. We are pioneering the use of IoT technologies, linking up smart applications in a range of areas and creating smart platforms to capture, analyse and deliver appropriate data. Our aim is to deliver a smarter, more connected, healthier Manchester. This session will explore how IoT technology can support cities in more effective delivery of health and social care, help citizens to cocreate care plans with their health providers and to be engaged and empowered to manage their own health and wellbeing. Panellists Chair: Carmel Dickinson; University of Manchester Nick Chrissos; CISCO; IoT for Smart, Healthy Cities Julie Harrison; Central Manchester Foundation Trust: IoT for Patient Self-Management: Chronic Conditions Gary Leeming; Greater Manchester Academic Health Science Network: Joining up the Data Andrew Beechener; Republic of Things Ltd: IoT for Healthier Citizens |
Workshop Competence for IT-induced change in health care work practices Read More Parallel 45 Workshop: Competence for IT-induced change in health care work practicesDigitalisation has been hailed as a cure for growing disparities between needs for services and available resources. The increasingly digitalized health care can empower the clients, change work processes, division of work, even written or silent rules of work. We argue that coupled with ageing and increasingly multicultural population, the existing knowledge and skills of the health care professionals are not sufficient to master new, digital work practices in health care. This workshop explores the new competences required from the health care professionals and the management in the digital era of health care. Organisers Dr Hannele Hyppönen; National Institute for Health and Welfare, Finland Dr Outi Ahonen; Laurea University of applied sciences, Finland Dr Philip Scott; University of Portsmouth Dr Sari Kujalal; Aalto University Dr Tarja Heponiemi; National Institute for Health and Welfare, Finland Dr Elina Rajalahti; Laurea University of applied sciences, Finland |
Panel Healthcare informatics standards for frailty Read More Parallel 46 Panel: Healthcare information standards for frailty: why, when and how?Frailty is a condition that predisposes individuals to progressive decline in different functional domains, leading to falls and fractures, disability and dependency on others, hospitalization, institutional placement and ultimately death. Through discussion and active participation, the audience to this panel will gain insights in the problems of managing frail elderly patients in the absence of condition-related decision support and reach concrete proposals in the form of a call for action, on the main question: What data would be necessary to drive the strategic and operational agenda and facilitate coordination across technological, professional and organizational strands to ensure active healthy ageing? Panellists Silvina Santana; University of Aveiro: Frail elder citizen trajectories: user story as starting point and reflection opportunity Maria Bujnowska; University of Wroclaw: Aspects of coordinated, holistic service approach to frailty management Sarah Damanti; Fondazione IRCCS Ca’ Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico Milano: Challenges in frailty-related information use and decision making in clinical practice Silvina Santana; University of Aveiro: Indicators for frailty interventions: results from a recent European Delphi panel Catherine Chronaki; HL7 Foundation Brussels: The role of patient summary standards and specifications on integrated and cross-border management of frailty |
Patient safety Read More Parallel 47 Patient safety11:30 – 11:45 Mobile medical apps and mHealth devices: a framework to build medical apps and mHealth devices in an ethical manner to promote safer use – a literature review Sharp M, O’Sullivan D 11:45 – 12:00 EHR improvement using incident reports Teame T, Stålhane T, Nytrø Ø 12:00 – 12:15 Improving handovers between hospitals and primary care: implementation of e-messages and the importance of training Netteland G 12:15 – 12:30 The association between the STOPP/START criteria and gastro-intestinal track bleedings in elderly patients Veldhuis A, Sent D, Bruin-Huisman L, Beers E, Abu-Hanna A 12:30 – 12:45 Adoption of an electronic medication reconciliation tool and its impact on the quality of discharge prescriptions Tamblyn R, Winslade N, Lee TC, Motulsky A, Couture I, Bonnici A, Qian CJ, Moraga T 12:45 – 13:00 Can hospital datasets be integrated to inform decision-making for quality and safety? Anderson J, Kirby T, Ross A, Murrells T |
Panel Maximising ‘Depth of Field’ for health data Read More Parallel 48 Panel: Maximising 'Depth of Field' for health dataThis panel considers issues of granularity in health informatics, and outlines strategies for bridging between different levels: making use of big data to support precision approaches to health (focusing in), and making sense of ‘small’ data through data visualisation (focusing out). Formal presentations will be followed by facilitated questions from the floor to the panel. Panellists Dr Eneida Mendonca; University of Wisconsin: Big data from the perspective of integration of EHR, genomic data, and external factors as well as the role of big data in clinical decision support and precision approaches to health. Dr Suzanne Bakken; Columbia University: Precision approaches in 1) characterising phenotype, genotype, and environment; 2) discovery of intervention targets for care and public health; and 3) intervention delivery. Dr Nick Hardiker; University of Salford School: Contemporary approaches to facilitating multiple use of health data and integration of primary health data with other data sources and aggregated for reuse. Dr Dawn Dowding; Columbia University: Leveraging and visualising data at the point of care to help support clinical decision-making; the importance of considering user characteristics when designing data visualisations; the challenges of integrating visualised data into existing EHR systems and approaches to evaluation of data visualisation technology, such as clinical dashboards. |
Biosurveillance and population health monitoring Read More Parallel 49 Biosurveillance and population health monitoring11:30 – 11:45 Using food purchase data to identify areas where people cannot afford healthy food Jahagirdar D, Quesnel-Vallee A, Buckeridge DL 11:45 – 12:00 Real-time research and surveillance in companion animals; integrating electronic health records to provide one health informatics messaging and feedback loops to practice Radford A, Noble P, Jones P, Vizcaino F 12:00 – 12:15 An information system for real-time gastro-intestinal surveillance monitoring Rowlingson B, Diggle P, Hale A 12:15 – 12:30 Incorporating previous addresses into environmental epidemiology using routine data John G 12:30 – 12:45 Sociodemographic variations in the incidence of clinically diagnosed eczema, 1997-2015: A United Kingdom population-based cohort study Ban L, Langan S, Abuabara K, Thomas K, Abdul Sultan A, Sach T, McManus E, Santer M, Ratib S |
Semantic technology & research objects Read More Parallel 50 Semantic technology and research objects11:30 – 11:45 Computable information governance contracts Cunningham J, Ainsworth J, Leeming G 11:45 – 12:00 A semantic framework for logical cross-validation, evaluation and impact analyses of population health interventions Shaban-Nejad A, Okhmatovskaia A, Shin EK, Davis RL, Franklin BE, Buckeridge DL 12:00 – 12:15 Discovering central practitioners in a medical discussion forum using semantic web analytics Rajabi E, Abidi SS 12:15 – 12:30 Towards an open infrastructure for relating scholarly assets Munro C, Couch P, Johnson J, Ainsworth J, Buchan I 12:30 – 12:45 Architecture and initial development of a digital library platform for computable knowledge objects for health Flynn A, Bahulekar N, Boisvert P, Lagoze C, Meng G, Rampton J, Friedman C 12:45 – 13:00 An approach for the support of semantic workflows in electronic health records Schweitzer M, Hörbst A |
||
13:00 | Lunch & Poster Session – Exchange Hall | |||||||||||
14:30 | Keynote Plenary: How Linked (and even Open) Data can benefit Healthcare systems Frank van Harmelen, Professor of Knowledge Representation & Reasoning, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands |
|||||||||||
15:30 | Coffee Break – Exchange Hall | |||||||||||
16:00 | European federation for medical informatics annual meeting Read More Parallel 51 EFMI Special Session: Accreditation of Health Informatics Courses in Europe; EFMI – IMIA collaborationIn this year’s EFMI special session, we will introduce AC2, and Accreditation and Certification of Competencies initiative in EFMI. We will present the EFMI – IMIA initiative for accreditation of Health informatics programs, and invite to a discussion of opportunities for and feasibility of international scientific – professional accreditation of Health Informatics program in Europe. We like to explore if a complementing accreditation by EFMI – IMIA would support comparable standards, certification, workforce mobility and employability across Europe? The initiative complement national accreditation processes and should comply with the Bologna framework. Speakers: Christian Lovis, John Mantas, Monique Jaspers, Nicolette de Keizer Moderator: Anne Moen |
Panel Regional health records Read More Parallel 52 Panel: Regional health records: integrating the integratedAttempts to develop a national integrated electronic health record for the UK in the mid 1990s and 2000s were largely unsuccessful. Consequently, specific regions of the UK responded by developing local projects with a smaller footprint. A variety of different approaches have been adopted by these regional programmes, based on local requirements. Chaired by Sarah Thew from the Greater Manchester Academic Health Science Network, the panel members will describe their local projects and the different technical approaches adopted. They will discuss the growing need and mechanisms for interoperability between regions, in particular the use of open standards. Panellists Declan Hadley; Lancashire Care NHS Foundation Trust: The Lancashire Patient Record Exchange Service – Creating an Information Exchange Platform to support health and social care across Lancashire Andy Kinnear; Connecting Care, Bristol & British Computer Society: Connecting Care – Enabling health and social care professionals to share a summary patient record for direct care in Bristol Gary Leeming; Greater Manchester Academic Health Science Network: DataWell – Connecting 39 health and social care organisations within Greater Manchester to enable direct care, audit and research Tony Shannon; Ripple Foundation: The Ripple Foundation – Working to develop an open source, standards-based integrated digital care platform Rachel Dunscombe; Salford Royal Foundation Trust: Regional records integration for secondary care provision – Perspectives from an NHS Centre of Digital Excellence |
Translational bioinformatics Read More Parallel 53 Translational bioinformatics16:00 – 16:15 A translational research infrastructure to support clinical audit and research utilising clinical and omics data Spiridou A, Coker B, Smith JC, Hasan S, Durbaba S, Gearay S, NIHR Health Informatics Collaborative T, Chowdhury P, Hubbard T, Lord G, Hernandez- Fuentes M 16:15 – 16:30 Community detection algorithms for analysis of biological networks Silva J, Bennett L, Kittas A, Yang L, Liu S, Papageorgiou L, Tsoka S 16:30 – 16:45 Supporting biomarker discovery using text mining Thompson P, Boylan K, Freemont A, Ananiadou S 16:45 – 17:00 Development and evaluation of a case-based retrieval service Pasche E, Chinali M, Gobeill J, Ruch P 17:00 – 17:15 Mining and classification of a large collection of in vivo bioassay descriptions Zwierzyna M, Overington J 17:15 – 17:30 Learning differentially expressed gene pairs in microarray data Zhou SM, XIA XL, Brophy S |
Patient and public engagement in health informatics Read More Parallel 54 Patient and public engagement in health informatics16:00 – 16:15 A method for co-designing theory-based behaviour change systems for health promotion Janols R, Lindgren H 16:15 – 16:30 Designing a decision aid to improve secondary prevention for stroke survivors with multimorbidity: A stakeholder engagement study Porat T, Marshall I, Sadler E, Vadillo MA, Curcin V, McKevitt C, Wolfe C 16:30 – 16:45 Persona development and educational needs to support informal caregivers Al Awar Z, Kuziemsky C 16:45 – 17:00 Public benefits: a central justification and problematic dimension of health informatics Aitken M, Porteous C, Cunningham-Burley S |
Panel Developing a reference scheme for informatics recommendations Read More Parallel 55 Panel: Towards developing a reference scheme for informatics recommendations: a TIGER, IFHIMA and AHIMA joint actionDue to the importance of health IT in providing patient care, many professional and scientific organisations have issued recommendations on informatics competencies. These recommendations share many similarities, yet they also differ. The main objective of this panel is to raise awareness amongst the members of the scientific community for the need of defining a common ground for classifying and comparing recommendations. It is also the objective of the panel to initiate a dialog in the scientific community about a tentative reference scheme. The main outcome of this panel will be a draft of a reference scheme for informatics competency recommendations. Panellists Prof Ursula Hübner; University AS Osnabrück: Introduction, TIGER recommendation framework Mervat Abdelhak; School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Pittsburgh: Recommendations from AHIMA’s Global Health Workforce Council (GHWC) Angelika Händel; University Hospital of Erlangen: Recommendations from AHIMA’s Global Health Workforce Council (GHWC) Rachelle Blake; Omni Micro Systems und Omni Med Solutions GmbH and Renton Technical College: Health IT Competencies (HITCOMP) Tool and Database, Horizon2020 EU*US_eHealth_Work |
Health outcomes & health services research Read More Parallel 56 Health outcomes and health services research16:00 – 16:15 Evaluating the impacts on health outcomes of Welsh government funded schemes designed to improve the energy efficiency of the homes of low income households Morrison-Rees S, Lowe S and Berridge D. 16:15 – 16:30 Hospital admissions and ED presentations for dental conditions indicate access to hospital, not health inequality Yap M, Kok MR, Nanda-Paul S, Vickery A, Whyatt D 16:30 – 16:45 Needles in a haystack: screening and healthcare system evidence for homelessness Fargo J, Montgomery AE, Byrne T, Brignone E, Cusack M, Gundlapalli A 16:45 – 17:00 Evidence for business intelligence in health care: a literature review Loewen L, Roudsari A 17:00 – 17:15 Limitations for health research with restricted data collection from UK primary care: a systematic review Campbell J, Dedman D, Gallagher A, Meeraus W, Murray-Thomas T, Oyinlola J, Strongman H, Williams R |
Dashboards & feedback Read More Parallel 57 Dashboards and feedback16:00 – 16:15 Development of a web-based quality dashboard including a toolbox to improve pain management in Dutch intensive care Roos-Blom MJ, Gude W, de Jonge E, Spijkstra JJ, van der Veer S, Dongelmans D, de Keizer N 16:15 – 16:30 Understanding the utilisation of a novel interactive electronic medication safety dashboard by pharmacists and clinicians in general practice: a qualitative study Jeffries M, Keers R, Phipps D, Williams R, Avery A, Rodgers S, Kontopantelis E, Peek N, Ashcroft D 16:30 – 16:45 Associations between medication safety and use of an electronic medication safety dashboard in primary care Gude W, Williams R, Vigo M, Kontopantelis E, Jeffries M, Keers R, Ashcroft D, Peek N 16:45 – 17:00 Development and testing of clinical performance feedback theory in UK primary care: a meta-synthesis and pilot study Brown B, Williams R, Balatsoukas P, Gude W, Blakeman T, Daker-White G, Sperrin M, van der Veer S, Peek N, Buchan I 17:00 – 17:15 Using feedback intervention theory to design clinical dashboards Dowding D, Onorato N, Rosati R, Barron Y, Merrill J, Russell D 17:15 – 17:30 A digital framework to support providers and patients in diabetes related behavior modification Abidi S, Vallis M, Piccinini H, Imran SA, Abidi SS |
Panel Scaling health informatics research across the atlantic Read More Parallel 58 Panel: Lost in Translation? Scaling Health Informatics Research Across the AtlanticThe panel will focus on the opportunities for the transatlantic scaling of health informatics research and will explore the challenges and rewards of working across regional and international borders. After introducing the panel members the discussion will explore challenges of regulation, scale, variations in the types of data available, harmonization, curation, standards, user management, and evaluation, and how they have overcome these challenges. There will be significant time devoted to questions from the floor to enable the audience to get maximum feedback on these issues from the panel. Panellists Chair: Prof Iain Buchan; University of Manchester Prof Mahmood Adil; Public Health Intelligence, Health Protection Scotland, and Medical Information Services Division, NHS National Services Scotland Prof Michael Schull; Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, Ontario, Canada Dr Brendan Krause; Optum Labs Prof Umberto Tacchinardi; School of Medicine and Public Health at University of Wisconsin-Madison |
Clinical epidemiology Read More Parallel 59 Clinical epidemiology16:00 – 16:15 Which outcomes matter to patients? Comparing the relationship between patient-reported and traditional outcome measures on patient satisfaction in surgery Jones C, Drake T, O’Neill S, McLean K, Shaw C, Wigmore S, Harrison E 16:15 – 16:30 Respiratory infections as vascular triggers: time-series analysis of hospital admission with myocardial infarction and laboratory-confirmed respiratory infection in England (2004-2015) Blackburn R, Pebody R, Hayward A, Warren-Gash C 16:30 – 16:45 Respiratory infections as vascular triggers: self-controlled case series analysis of linked Scottish hospital and laboratory data Blackburn R, Whitaker H, Hayward A, Warren-Gash C 16:45 – 17:00 Women of lowest and highest socio-economic deciles are at higher risk of hospitalizations associated with depression during the perinatal period Fairthorne J, Hanley G, Oberlander T, Brant R 17:00 – 17:15 A population-based study examining injury among older adults with and without dementia Meuleners L, Hobday M 17:15 – 17:30 Non-attendance at outpatient appointments is associated with increased A&E and emergency inpatient admissions for children and young people with neurology diagnoses Jarvis S, Livingston J, Fraser L |
Text mining Read More Parallel 60 Text mining16:00 – 16:15 Developing a manually annotated corpus of clinical letters for breast cancer patients on routine follow-up Pitson G, Banks P, Cavedon L, Verspoor K 16:15 – 16:30 Identifying emerging trends in medical informatics: a synthesis approach van Kasteren Y, Williams P, Maeder A 16:30 – 16:45 Automated diagnosis coding with combined text representations Berndorfer S, Henriksson A 16:45 – 17:00 Using statistics and data mining approaches to analyze male sexual behaviors and use of erectile dysfunction drugs based on large questionnaire data Qiao Z, Li X, Liu H, Zhang L, Cao J, Xie G, Qin N, Jiang H, Lin H 17:00 – 17:15 Automated identification of national health survey research topics in the academic literature Yergens D, Dutton D, Fiest K 17:15 – 17:30 Prevalence estimation of protected health information in Swedish clinical text Henriksson A, Kvist M, Dalianis H |
||
17:30 | Science slam Read More |
Health Tech Women –Drinks reception | ||||||||||
18:30 | Close | |||||||||||
19:30 | Conference Dinner, Manchester Cathedral |
*Preliminary programme subject to change
24 – 26 APRIL
Day(s)
:
Hour(s)
:
Minute(s)
:
Second(s)
