1 / 9

Healthcare computing at the University of Portsmouth

Healthcare computing at the University of Portsmouth. Dr Jim Briggs http://www.chmi.port.ac.uk/ Last updated: 9 th June 2014. Mission.

elysia
Download Presentation

Healthcare computing at the University of Portsmouth

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Healthcare computing at the University of Portsmouth Dr Jim Briggs http://www.chmi.port.ac.uk/ Last updated: 9th June 2014

  2. Mission • The organisations that form the National Health Service plus the ones that provide social care form a multi-billion pound business sector that impacts on the lives of every single person in the UK. Consequently, any developments in technology that can make the work of these organisations more efficient are to be encouraged. • Our broad aim is to bring our information systems and computer science expertise to bear to make easier some of the day-to-day jobs involved in healthcare delivery and administration. To achieve this we: • establish and maintain links with healthcare and social care professionals to keep abreast of their problems and needs; • conduct research to investigate new solutions to relevant problems; • provide consultancy services to organisations and individuals in the health and social care sector that wish to adopt information, communication and sensing technologies.

  3. Main areas of interest • Computing • Telemedicine/telecare/telehealth/e-health/digital wellbeing • Clinical outcome modelling • Standards for information interchange • Socio-technical aspects of health informatics • Health-related apps • Engineering • Telecare technology/digital wellbeing • Creative Technologies • Applications of CT to healthcare • Virtual rehabilitation

  4. Southern Institute for Health Informatics (SIHI) conferences • 14 conferences since July 1998 • Last one on 11th September 2013 • Next one on 10th September 2014

  5. Accomplishments Challenges Keeping grant income rolling in Sustaining critical mass Deepening areas Are we publishing "significant" papers? Getting more involved in our "communities" • Establishing track record nationally • Getting known internationally • Approaching critical mass • Surviving review of research centres • Broadening areas within HI • Publishing a significant number of papers

  6. Next steps • Better integration • Better information sharing • Build on external collaborations

  7. http://www.chmi.port.ac.uk/

  8. Clinical outcome modelling - progress • HEIF fund supported us for 1 year • Stuart Jarvis full-time post • Done much work on NEWS • comparing medicine with surgery • binary variants of NEWS • effectiveness of NEWS escalation criteria (3*) • effect of all versus random observations • comparing NEWS with other EWSs and MET systems • Collaboration with Canada and Ireland • Thunder Bay comparison with Portsmouth

  9. Clinical outcome modelling – bid year • Hospital alerting via electronic noticeboard (HAVEN) – with PHT, U Oxford, Oxford U hospitals – awarded £1.8m by HICF • Missed care – with PHT, U Southampton, KCL, U York – shortlisted by HS&DR • Length of stay – with PHT, U Southampton – outline submitted to HS&DR • Continuous Care 365 – with InMezzo Ltd, SEHTA, Complex Neurological Consulting Ltd – outline submitted to TSB Biomedical Catalyst • Tacrolimus study – with PHT – developing • PHT business case – awaiting developments

More Related