Cyberinfrastructures
for Public Health” National Conference on Digital Government Research, May
2005, Atlanta, GA.
Panel: "Cyberinfrastructures for Public Health"
Monday, 10:45 a.m. - Noon, and 1:30 - 3 p.m..
Abstract: The leading preventable causes of premature mortality are
due in large measure to causes that can be changed, such as tobacco use,
dietary behaviors, substance/alcohol abuse, injuries, communicable
diseases. Yet addressing these major public health threats remain an acute
challenge: they represent system-wide problems that would benefit
network-centric approaches that have as a foundation the discovery,
development and delivery of critical information.
The goal of this symposium will be to explore the critical health
informatics foundations that must serve as a springboard for improving the
major public health challenges of our time, with the recognition that such
an effort will represent and result in a fundamental transformation in the
public health system as we know it.
A critical theme of this panel is to assess the role of digital government
in the development of these critical cyberinfrastructures. This symposium
brings together expertise from several converging fields which together
represent necessary infrastructures that are needed to improve both the
structure and function of the health care system.
Speakers:
Symposium Summary:
Scott Leischow will present an update on an initiative supported by the
National Cancer Institute which explores the interplay of systems
approaches (e.g. system dynamics, agent-based modeling, econometrics,
etc), social network analysis and knowledge management to better
understand and improve the discovery, development and delivery of
approaches intended to improve public health.
Brad Hesse, Acting Chief of the Health Communication and Informatics
Branch at the National Cancer Institute, will present a conceptual
framework for the development of informatics infrastructures needed to
improve public health.
Judith Qualters, Chief of the Environmental Health Tracking Branch at the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, will present on the foundation
of most public health practice: surveillance. The surveillance
infrastructures are critically necessary for best assuring optimal public
health, and the strengths and shortcomings of this infrastructure will be
discussed.
Helga Rippen, Department of Health and Human Services, is part of the team
working on the creation of a national electronics medical record system
that will serve as a backbone for assuring improved quality and care for
all Americans. She will discuss challenges and opportunities for
transforming our health care system via this cyberinfrastructure.
Noshir Contractor, Professor of Speech and Psychology, will present on the
essential cyberinfrastructures needed to assure networks can be optimized
for improving public health. He will discuss network analysis and
development approaches used in non-health domains, and in what ways those
approaches can be used to improve the nationŐs health.
David Introcaso from the Agency for Healthcare and Quality Improvement,
will discuss the evaluation of social networks, and in what way evaluation
is needed as part of the feedback loops to assure improved quality of care
in a complex health care environment.
Mark Parascandola, Epidemiologist at the National Cancer Institute, will
explore ethical considerations in the development and maintenance of
complex cyberinfrastrucures that have the potential to be used for public
health tracking and quality improvement.
Sylvia Spengler from the National Science Foundation, will discuss the
development of collaborative networks in the quest to improve public
health cyberinfrastructures.
See this page from DG.O
2005:
http://dgrc.org/dgo2005/program/abstract_cyberinfrastructure.jsp |