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Archive for the 'Informatics' category

 

Swine flu apps pervert free informatics

Information wants to be exploited—and that's generally a good thing. Exploitation has downsides too and these seem to be manifest when you look at the growing epidemic of iPhone apps pertaining to swine (novel, Mexican, or H1N1) influenza that you can pay to download from Apple's iTunes for use on your iPhone. As of today I count nineteen paid apps (in the UK store) and thirteen provided free-of-charge (although these may include paid advertisements). Do we need so much choice? Do we need flu updates on mobile devices at all? What are the risks associated with this expeditious development?
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iPhone 3.0 almost medical tricorder 1.0

I was always envious of the standard-issue Starfleet medical tricorder that "Bones" McKoy would employ with no-touch relish to confirm "He's dead, Jim!". At a recent iPhone OS 3.0 sneak peak event Apple unveiled a new developer API with accessory support that was exemplified by two biomedical applications.
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Medical and health app bonanza for iPhone

A year ago I bemoaned the lack of third-party native iPhone apps and could suggest few workarounds for absent medical applications. Looking back at The medical Palm (written in 2004) serves to illustrate how stagnant the Palm platform has become—my list of software was essentially unchanged when I retired my Palm from clinical practice earlier in 2008. Although I did experiment with Windows Mobile and tried equivalent medical applications, it wasn't a relationship with a future. Following the lukewarm reception of Web apps Apple's native App Store for iPhone/ iPod touch opened on July 10, and the mobile medical landscape has been transformed in the space of just three weeks. Already we have seen the release of some impressive tools aimed at doctors, medical students, and patients/ well-being enthusiasts.
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Clinical knowledge architect for hire

Dr Bruce McKenzie is now available for freelance consultancy as a clinical knowledge architect, addressing the unmet need for usable knowledge resources at the point-of-care in UK general practice. General practitioners (GPs) make more decisions in a day than a typical business executive, and these decisions cost not just money but potentially lives. It's challenging work, and you can but hope your decisions are based on good information. The problem is information overload and access to what you need when you need it: there's just too much and it's too hard to find in the context of a 10 minute consultation. As a GP for 10 years I can relate to this. I also have informatics knowledge and experience, and this puts me in a position to offer you solutions that are built the way a doctor would design them.
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Google maps and public health surveillance

Public health doctors are apparently "hopeless" at using traditional media (BMJ 2003;327(7422):1056); it's probable that their use of new media is even worse. WhoIsSick have come up with the idea to use Google Maps to track illnesses in local communities. Perhaps this is something that public health physicians should explore as a means to both inform populations about disease patterns and for encouraging their participation in reporting?
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YouTube health videos

As reported by the BBC, a general practice in Wales has begun using YouTube to distribute health information videos. The Builth and Llanwrtyd Medical Practice has thus far uploaded videos relating to inhaler technique and spacer devices in respiratory disease, having a smear, and blood sugar testing in diabetes.
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