Events Calendar

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AACP Annual Meeting
2015-07-11 - 2015-07-15    
All Day
The AACP Annual Meeting is the largest gathering of academic pharmacy administrators, faculty and staff, and each year offers 70 or more educational programs that cut across [...]
Engage, Innovation in Patient Engagement
2015-07-14 - 2015-07-15    
All Day
MedCity ENGAGE is an executive-level event where the industry’s brightest minds and leading organizations discuss best-in-class approaches to advance patient engagement and healthcare delivery. ENGAGE is the [...]
mHealth + Telehealth World 2015
2015-07-20 - 2015-07-22    
All Day
The role of technology in health care is growing year after year. Join us at mHealth + Telehealth World 2015 to learn strategies to keep [...]
2015 OSEHRA Open Source Summit
2015-07-29 - 2015-07-31    
All Day
Join the Premier Open Source Health IT Summit! Looking to gain expertise in both public and private sector open source health IT?  Want to collaborate [...]
Events on 2015-07-11
AACP Annual Meeting
11 Jul 15
National Harbor, Maryland
Events on 2015-07-14
Events on 2015-07-20
Events on 2015-07-29
2015 OSEHRA Open Source Summit
29 Jul 15
Bethesda
Articles

Big Data is About More Than Just EHRs

With all the talk these days about healthcare harnessing the power of big data, the industry is just starting to take advantage of the tsunami of data being generated by a myriad of sources, according to Victor Dzau, M.D., president of the Institute of Medicine.

Speaking on Monday in a keynote session at the World Health Care Congress in Washington, Dzau told the audience that when people discuss the concept of big data and healthcare “they don’t know what they’re talking about.”

Dzau, who previously served as president and CEO of Duke University Health System before being named president of IOM last year, argues that big data is “really about everything around the individual” including social interactions and activities, and not just electronic health records. “In fact, it’s about the totality of information,” he said.

“Right now, we’re really not dealing with big data,” Dzau said. “But, we are beginning to deal with a lot more” data with the proliferation of wearable sensors such as Fitbit and advances in genomics. “So, eventually there will be a time when truly we are dealing with every interaction” of a patient   physiologically and environmentally, he asserted.

However, according to Dzau, the analysis of big data—not the collection of this vast amount of data—is the major challenge confronting healthcare. “A much bigger issue is how we use the information” and addressing the issues of data security, privacy, and ownership as well as the “democratization of data,” he said, adding “we’re really at the very beginning” of this effort.

What is required is a “systematic collection of information,” according to Dzau. In addition, he believes that the healthcare industry needs to “invest heavily in informatics” as well as the human resources involved not only in the collection of data but also in the analysis of that data in a systematic way. “We have to train our clinicians to be competent in not only using electronic health records.”

Source