DocumentCode
985746
Title
Improving the health care and public health critical infrastructure
Author
Kun, Luis ; Ray, Pradeep ; Merrell, Ronald ; Kwankam, S. Yunkap
Author_Institution
Syst. Manage., Nat. Defense Univ., Washington, DC
Volume
27
Issue
6
fYear
2008
Firstpage
21
Lastpage
25
Abstract
If you think in terms of your lifetime, you may ponder that while the hours, minutes, and seconds of a day have remained the same, the amount of information that you have received, let´s say, in the 1980s compared with now, 2008, is drastically different. The size of information received in a day now is larger than what you have received in the past years. The information age has also created a wide range of tools, technologies, and techniques that continuously deliver enormous amounts of data, information, and knowledge. We are increasingly flooded with e-mails that routinely have a plethora of documents (in electronic form) that come in all shapes and forms (multimedia etc.) and more sophisticated types of data and information transmissions from sensing and monitoring devices as well. To compound this issue, there are usually no rules or standards, other than common sense, on how or where we should store all this information or knowledge. The bad news is that, with so much of information flow, it is difficult to filter in just the piece that may be needed at the right time. In many cases, we may not be aware where that information may be or if it exists somewhere at all. However, an information glut caused by a combination of pervasive systems and converging technologies may allow us to get useful and, at times, critical information anywhere and at the right time. In the past decade, with the proliferation of the Internet and the World Wide Web, many past and ongoing efforts have tried to improve the movement from text documents and database records to automated reasoning. This process is critical in particular for information sharing. This article provides a background of knowledge management for public health information infrastructure, followed by an illustration of the complexity of knowledge management for health care. We then present an evolving framework for semantic expression that would enable the sharing and exchange of knowledge in public health.
Keywords
health care; information networks; knowledge management; medical information systems; public administration; health care improvement; health care knowledge management complexity; information sharing; public health critical infrastructure improvement; public health information infrastructure; public health knowledge exchange; public health knowledge sharing; semantic expression; Electronic mail; Information filtering; Information filters; Internet; Knowledge management; Medical services; Monitoring; Public healthcare; Shape; Web sites; Delivery of Health Care; Health Personnel; Humans; Information Management; Medical Informatics; Public Health Administration; Public Health Informatics;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Magazine, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0739-5175
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MEMB.2008.930030
Filename
4671003
Link To Document