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
10/07/03
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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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