This is Disc 1 of the 2003 Audio Presentations
(Please choose Disc 1 or Disc 2)
OPENING / CLOSING SESSIONS
OP1 Opening Plenary Session
CS1 Closing Session
 
SESSIONS
S1 Advanced EMR Implementations - Practical Experience from Those Who Have Been There
S2 Decision Support Systems and User Behavior
S3 PDAs in Clinical Settings
S4 Consensus Action Agenda for the National Health Information Infrastructure
S5 Syndromic Surveillance: Performance and Utility
S6 HIV Care in the Community
S7 Integrating Genomic and Microarray Data to Promote New Medical Discoveries through Clinical Trials
S8 Evaluation of Terminological Content
S9 Classification Problem Solving
S10 Assessment of Educational Methods
S12 Recruitment of Patients for Clinical Research
S13 E-science, or How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the Grid
S14 Patient Safety Data Standards: A Report from the Institute of Medicine
S15 Outbreak Detection and Investigation
S16 Implementing Computerized Patient Record Systems: How to Succeed, How to Fail, and How to Know What Happened
S17 Success Factors in Implementing CPOE
S18 Component-based Architecture for Health Information Systems: An International Perspective
S19 From Models to Modules: A Lifecycle View of Protocol and Guideline Models and Applications
S20 Methods for Disease Surveillance
S21 Informatics and Self-care Applications
S22 The NCBI Suite of Bioinformatics Tools
S23 Foundations of Natural Language Processing
S24 Accessing and Visualizing Medical Data
S25 Informatics Innovations to Mainstream Products: What Does the HIT Industry Need From Academia
S26 Management of Health Care in Large Organizations
S27 Large-scale Regional Health Information Systems
S28 Cognitive Evaluation for Systems Interaction
S29 Implementation of Systems for Guideline-based Care
S30 NCVHS Recommendations for Patient Medical Record Information Terminology Standards
S31 Emerging Techniques and Concepts in Public Health and Disease Surveillance
S32 Access to Consumer Health Information
S33 Enhancing MEDLINE Searching
S34 Defining Ontologies of Anatomical Structure: A
Foundation of Bio- and Medical Informatics
S35 Bio*Medical Informatics: Training and the National Programs of Excellence in Bio Computing
S36 American Academy of Family Physicians Open Source HER
S37 Information Needs for Clinical Systems
S38 Promoting the National Adoption of Electronic Prescribing: Optimal Design, Financial Incentives, and Policy Proposals
S39 Novel Approaches to Patient Education
S40 Microarrays
S41 The Nursing Terminology Summit Conference 2003: Using Terminology Methods and Tools to Represent Nursing Knowledge
S42 Machine Learning
S43 Careers in Medical Informatics
S45 CPOE
S46 Connecting for Health: Toward Interoperability through the Adoption of National Clinical Data Standards
S47 SARS: An Informatics Response to a World Crisis
S48 Consumer Behavior in On-line Searching for Health Information
S49 ACMI Panel: Organizational Perspectives on the Future of Biomedical Informatics
S50 The Electronic Health Record: Emerging International Trends
S51 Interfaces for Enhanced Medical Care
S52 Models for Guideline-based Care
S53 Pens, Tablets, Handhelds: Choosing the Best Information Tools
S54 Information Infrastructure in the Transformation of American Health Services
S55 Natural Language Processing Systems
S56 Management of Multivarient and Multidimensional Data
S57 Training Informatics Scholars - Innovation, Interdisciplinary, & Issues
S58 Support for Medical Education and Research
S59 Structure and Dissemination of EHR Records and Systems
S60 Methods to Automate Quality Assurance
S61 Bridging the Digital Divide: Informatics and Vulnerable
Populations: Recommendations of Spring 2003 Congress
S62 Information Needs for Health Care Consumers
S63 The Bioinfomed Study: Towards a Research Agenda in Biomedical Informatics
S64 Terminology Servers and Services
S65 Applied technologies to support data integration and natural language processing
S66 Templates for Clinical Data and Knowledge
S67 Four Perspectives on Public Health Informatics Education to Develop the Public Health Information Infrastructure
 S68 User Interfaces for Patient Records
 S69 Medical Informatics in Action - The Disease Management Model (DM)
S70 Opportunities for Decision Support In Clinical Workflow
S71 Emerging Technologies
S72 Patient Portals: Features, Issues, Lessons Learned
S73 Ontologies for Drugs and Other Interventions
S74 Imaging Methods
S75 Issues and Technologies in Education
S76 Federal Funding Opportunities for Informatics
S78 Technologies for Communication Among Clinicians
S80 Integrating Health Information Resources with Web-Based Clinical Information Systems
S81 Robots for Clinical Care
S82 Data Sources for Disease Surveillance
S83 Support for Biological Research
S84 Automated Indexing
S85 Abstracting Data
S87 Clinician Access to Patient Data
S88 Decision Support and Security Enhancements for Clinical Information Systems
S89 Open source in health care: experiences, visions and future directions
S90 Imaging as the Phenotypic Expression of Human Disease: Need for the Creation and Linking of Imaging Databases
S91 Natural Language Processing for Biomedical Applications
S92 Modeling Anatomy
S93 Ontologies and Design
S94 Tangible Tools and Collaborative Work: Challenges at the Boundary Between Physical and Digital Information Tools
S95 Innovative Approaches to Education
 
 Workshops
W1 International Nursing Informatics 
W2 Web Sites for Health Care Education Programs: Demonstrations and Discussion 
W3 Multicultural Patient Education: Developing Guidelines and Best Practices 
W4 Dealing with Downtime in the Real World 
W5 Help at the Elbow: Developing Staff to Support the Clinical- Technical Interface in Electronic Medical Record Implementation 
W6 The Multi-disciplinary Plan of Patient Care: Guideline
Supported Order Sets
 
W7 Online Informed Consent: Not Just a Check Box 
W8 Workshop on Ontology for the Medical Domain 
W9 Towards a Global Nursing Knowledge Network 
W10 The Future of Health Informatics: Will it Be Part of the Problem or Part of the Solution? 
W11 Survival of the Fittest? Information Technology as a
Subject in Health Professional Curricula
 
 


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