20031015-Health-Kratz

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Transcript 20031015-Health-Kratz

Health Sciences Overview
Mary Kratz
Health Sciences Program Manager
[email protected]
[email protected]
October 7, 2003
The scope of the Internet2 Health Sciences
Task Force includes clinical practice,
medical and related biological
research, education, and
medical awareness
in the public.
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Roadmap
• Networking Health:
Rx for the Internet
– National Research Council
Report
– February 2000
• National Academy Press
– ISBN 0-309-06843-6
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Internet2 Member Universities
• 86 Medical Schools
at Internet2 members
• 130 Health Science
related colleges
• Leadership by
Advisory Group
Hawaii
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Health Science Activities
Medical Middleware Working Group
• Dr. Jack Buchanan, UTMEM
• Steve Olshansky facilitator
Orthopaedic Surgery Working Group
• Dr. Chad Smith, USC
• Ed Johansen, JD, facilitator
BioEthics Working Group (in formation)
• John Yost, PhD, Bradley University
Security SIG
• Jere Retzer, OHSU
Veterinary Medical SIG
• Gary Allen, DVM, Umissouri
Cardiovascular SIG
• Dr. David Sahn, OHSU
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Member Requests for Future
Health Science Working Groups
• Simulation and
Imaging
• Telemedicine and
Robotics
• International
Education
• Biomedical
Engineering
• Pharmaceutical
Industry
• Nanotechnology
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Radiology
Pathology
Ophthalmology
Dentistry
Nursing
Preventative
Medicine
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Grand Challenge:
Information Infrastructure
Organism(person)
(1m)
Systems models
Organ
Tissue
& organ systems
(10-3m)
(10-6m)
Continuum models (PDEs)
ODEs
Cell
Protein
(10-9m)
Stochastic models
(10-12m)
Pathway models
Atom
(10-15m)
Gene networks
Modeling, Simulation, Visualization, Software
Frameworks, Databases, Networking, Grids
Courtesy: Peter Hunter, University of Auckland
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Wisdom
Knowledge
Information
Data
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Health Science and
Information Technology Overlap
 More new information will be created in the
next year than throughout our entire history
 Instantaneous global collaboration is the next
killer application
 Medical science will not be possible without
advanced computing solutions
 R&D will rely increasingly on academic/industry
partnerships
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Why Internet2
 The student who will enter medical school in
5-10 years can absorb multiple channels of
information
Dynamic
charts
Second
screen
lecture
Communal
note taking
messaging
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The Internet of the Future and
the Future of Medicine
• High bandwidth human
interaction
• Low latency virtual
reality
• Reliable access to
computational
resources
• Secure retrieval of
medical images and
data
Image courtesy of:
Dr. Christopher Johnson, Director of the SCI
Institute
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Inter-disciplinary Partnerships
Catalyse New Uses
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Direct visualizations
Data collection/integration
Data mining
Device intercommunication
Haptic immersion
Augmented dexterity
Advanced sensors
Wireless data collection
Economic models for
reimbursement realities
Image courtesy of:
Dr. Christopher Johnson, Director of the
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SCI Institute
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Sessions at this meeting:
 Deployment of a High-Speed Metropolitan Network to Share
Medical Information
 Advanced Applications in Drug Discovery and Multimedia
Medical Education
 Secure Videoconferences for the Health Sciences
 Medical Simulators and Internet2: Combining Technology to
Improve Medical Education
 International Health Education
 Next-Generation Health Care Applications
 Bridging Cultural and Technical Boundaries Through HighPerformance E-Learning
 Distributed Interactive Virtual Environments
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Special Events of Interest:
• The Medium and
the Message:
Tomorrow's
Technology and
Today's Health
Education Needs
• Health Science
Task Force
– 7:30–8:45am
Wednesday
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National Library of Medicine Scalable
Information Infrastructure (SII) Awards
• http://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/siiawards.html
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/siiawards.html
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