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Difference between revisions of "AID 201401 Agenda"
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#Administrative agenda items | #Administrative agenda items | ||
#*approval of the agenda | #*approval of the agenda | ||
+ | #Tooling aspects | ||
+ | ##Evaluation of implementation oriented tools (see [[Tools for RIM based software development]], our scope has widened however) | ||
#Implementing Natural Language Processing (NLP) (Peter Haug, Intermountain Healthcare, US) | #Implementing Natural Language Processing (NLP) (Peter Haug, Intermountain Healthcare, US) | ||
#*Peter has implemented NLP, and will discuss some of the implementation aspects. | #*Peter has implemented NLP, and will discuss some of the implementation aspects. |
Revision as of 14:50, 24 December 2013
This is the agenda of the AID HL7 User Group, which will meet during the WGM in San Antonio January 19-24, 2014.
Monday Q3
- Administrative agenda items
- Approval of the minutes of the Amsterdam out-of-cycle meeting
- Approval of the scheduled AID out-of-cycle meetings
- MOTION to approve of the organization of the following three out of cycle meetings: one to be held in May in Canada; another to be held in the Netherlands in June (likely to be held on June 3rd); and one to be held in Amsterdam on November 27th.
- Review of the agenda for the week
- Discussion whether or not to organize one full days worth of 'users sharing implementation experiences' after each and every HL7 connectathon (currently: FHIR connectathons)
- Rene: this could be either the monday of the WGM (also at plenary meetings), or sunday PM as long as FHIR connectathons are scheduled for the saturday-sunday of the WGM.
- MOTION the AID HL7 User Group regards the participants of a HL7 connectathon to be part of its target audience and hence would like to facilitate the exchange of best practices between the connectathon participants by organizing an AID meeting in conjunction with the connecthon, e.g. the day after the connectathon.
- Review of AID Activtities
- FHIR-enabling existing applications (Robert Worden, Open Mapping Software, UK)
- Most existing FHIR servers are Greenfields implementations – with a new database, new code, etc. But as FHIR takes off, there will be a big demand to FHIR-enable existing applications. Probably most FHIR servers will be of this form?
- There is now an Open Source Toolkit to do this – to build a FHIR server on any healthcare application which has a relational database. It is being used to FHIR-enable the PAS at a London NHS Hospital. The good news is – you don’t need to write new code to do it (at least for a read-only server). It is done by mapping the application database onto FHIR logical models for resources, and so can be very quick to do. (FHIR searches generate SQL retrievals; you don’t need to code them)
- Open Mapping Software is an open source toolkit that can also be used to FHIR-enable existing applications. For two small demo servers built in this way, and for links to the tools, instructions, etc., see http://worden.globalgold.co.uk:8080/FHIR_a/hosted_demo.html.
- Robert will cover the mapping approach between legacy databases and FHIR, and he'll discuss using a FHIR search on multiple servers at once.
Tues Q6
- Tooling presentations; Hosted by Tooling
Wed Q4
- Administrative agenda items
- approval of the agenda
- Other agenda items
Thu Q3 (hosting the Tooling WG)
- Administrative agenda items
- approval of the agenda
- Tooling aspects
- Evaluation of implementation oriented tools (see Tools for RIM based software development, our scope has widened however)
- Implementing Natural Language Processing (NLP) (Peter Haug, Intermountain Healthcare, US)
- Peter has implemented NLP, and will discuss some of the implementation aspects.
- Natural Language Processing (NLP) in medicine is the subject of a great deal of discussion and research. People have used this technology to extract knowledge from the medical literature, to assist in indexing and summarizing clinical reports, to extract information for research and for clinical care, and to assist in the process of generating medical billing. There are a number of useful applications which rely on NLP.
- Our experience at Intermountain Healthcare is principally in the realm of information extraction. We have used these tools to support research and in clinical settings as a part of computerized decision support systems. In this environment, a variety of different technologies can be applied.
- Other agenda items