RDAP 16 Poster: Challenges and Opportunities in an Institutional Repository S...ASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2016
Atlanta, GA
May 4-7, 2016
Poster session (Wednesday, May 4)
Presenters:
Amy Koshoffer, University of Cincinnati
Eric J. Tepe, University of Cincinnati
Mr. Thomas A. Burke - One Health, Traceability and Emerging TechnologiesJohn Blue
One Health, Traceability and Emerging Technologies - Mr. Thomas A. Burke, Food Traceability Scientist, Global Food Traceability Center, Institute of Food Technologists, from the 2018 NIAA Annual Conference, Livestock Traceability: Opportunities for Animal Agriculture, plus the Traceability and the Real World Interactive Workshop, April 10 - 12, Denver, CO, USA.
More presentations at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCeUDeS810OcOfuEYwj1oHKQ
RDAP 16 Poster: Responding to Data Management and Sharing Requirements in the...ASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2016
Atlanta, GA
May 4-7, 2016
Poster session (Wednesday, May 4)
Presenter:
Caitlin Bakker, University of Minnesota
RDAP 16 Poster: Challenges and Opportunities in an Institutional Repository S...ASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2016
Atlanta, GA
May 4-7, 2016
Poster session (Wednesday, May 4)
Presenters:
Amy Koshoffer, University of Cincinnati
Eric J. Tepe, University of Cincinnati
Mr. Thomas A. Burke - One Health, Traceability and Emerging TechnologiesJohn Blue
One Health, Traceability and Emerging Technologies - Mr. Thomas A. Burke, Food Traceability Scientist, Global Food Traceability Center, Institute of Food Technologists, from the 2018 NIAA Annual Conference, Livestock Traceability: Opportunities for Animal Agriculture, plus the Traceability and the Real World Interactive Workshop, April 10 - 12, Denver, CO, USA.
More presentations at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCeUDeS810OcOfuEYwj1oHKQ
RDAP 16 Poster: Responding to Data Management and Sharing Requirements in the...ASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2016
Atlanta, GA
May 4-7, 2016
Poster session (Wednesday, May 4)
Presenter:
Caitlin Bakker, University of Minnesota
RDAP 16 Poster: Measuring adoption of Electronic Lab Notebooks and their impa...ASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2016
Atlanta, GA
May 4-7, 2016
Poster session (Wednesday, May 4)
Presenters:
Jan Cheetham, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Wendy Kozlowski, Cornell University
The Medical Cyber-Physical Systems Activity at EIT: A Look under the Hood
In the future, clinical environments will develop into medical cyber-physical systems of their own. Patients will get direct treatment according to a direct data acquisition and interpretation workflow. In the end, the doctor’s decision support will be provided according to the data the cyber- physical system (CPS) collects from the individual patients. This approach will be scalable, extend patient monitoring to data collections at home by using portable sensors providing information about a patient’s recovery status, and influence healthcare of the future.
160929 teamscope presentation molecule to businessSMBBV
Teamscope; mHealth, a paradigm shift in clinical reseach. Presentation by Diego Mechaca during 'From Molecule to Business' event by SMB Life Sciences and Health Valley at NovioTechCampus, Nijmegen, The Netherlands on September 29, 2016.
Augmenting Healthcare by Supporting General Practitioners and Disclosing Hea...Robin De Croon
Slides used during my public PhD defence at KU Leuven on June 23, 2017.
This PhD explores, designs, develops and evaluates a suite of information visualization tools for understanding, exploring, explaining and disclosing health information. This toolset is aimed at both general practitioners and patients and is driven by three underlying research goals: augmenting traditional practitioners’ workflows, boosting patient empowerment, and investigating novel opportunities in devices for supporting communication and collaboration between practitioners and patients.
Kyle Duarte of Management Systems for Health explains the use of mobile technology in delivering health services to hard-to-reach populations and how mHealth has improved health outcomes.
RDAP 16 Poster: Measuring adoption of Electronic Lab Notebooks and their impa...ASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2016
Atlanta, GA
May 4-7, 2016
Poster session (Wednesday, May 4)
Presenters:
Jan Cheetham, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Wendy Kozlowski, Cornell University
The Medical Cyber-Physical Systems Activity at EIT: A Look under the Hood
In the future, clinical environments will develop into medical cyber-physical systems of their own. Patients will get direct treatment according to a direct data acquisition and interpretation workflow. In the end, the doctor’s decision support will be provided according to the data the cyber- physical system (CPS) collects from the individual patients. This approach will be scalable, extend patient monitoring to data collections at home by using portable sensors providing information about a patient’s recovery status, and influence healthcare of the future.
160929 teamscope presentation molecule to businessSMBBV
Teamscope; mHealth, a paradigm shift in clinical reseach. Presentation by Diego Mechaca during 'From Molecule to Business' event by SMB Life Sciences and Health Valley at NovioTechCampus, Nijmegen, The Netherlands on September 29, 2016.
Augmenting Healthcare by Supporting General Practitioners and Disclosing Hea...Robin De Croon
Slides used during my public PhD defence at KU Leuven on June 23, 2017.
This PhD explores, designs, develops and evaluates a suite of information visualization tools for understanding, exploring, explaining and disclosing health information. This toolset is aimed at both general practitioners and patients and is driven by three underlying research goals: augmenting traditional practitioners’ workflows, boosting patient empowerment, and investigating novel opportunities in devices for supporting communication and collaboration between practitioners and patients.
Kyle Duarte of Management Systems for Health explains the use of mobile technology in delivering health services to hard-to-reach populations and how mHealth has improved health outcomes.
Testing technology in the ‘real world’ of acute healthcare: making it work. Presented by Bernice Redley, Deakin University, Australia, at HINZ 2014, 12 November 2014, 12.22pm, Plenary Room
A Proof-of-Concept Visualization to Increase Comprehension of Personal Medica...Robin De Croon
In this paper, we investigate how information visualization techniques can be leveraged to increase patient comprehension of personal medication schemes in order to make it easier for them to explore, explain and understand drug information. Using computer vision techniques, our solution is able to recognize medication boxes, or so-called pharmaceutical packages, which are laid on an ordinary table. A projector visualizes drug information such as interactions, adverse drug reactions, intolerances and the dosage regimen around corresponding boxes. Five prototypes are designed and evaluated following a user-centered, rapid-prototyping methodology. Test participants in our study included both general practitioners (GPs) and patients. Results are promising and clearly indicate that information visualization techniques are an effective means to explore and understand drug information. Even if this system was originally envisaged to be used as a means to improve `therapy dialogue' between GPs and their patients during consultations, our results show that both GPs and patients think it would be highly beneficial if patients were able to use the system at home.
Design and evaluation of an interactive proof-of-concept dashboard for genera...Robin De Croon
Targeted follow-up meetings in general practice are important and missed often, because of both patient and general practitioners (GPs) related reasons. In this paper, we present a proof-of-concept interactive visualization dashboard that provides GPs with a powerful, yet easy to use method to identify those patients in need of follow-up. We applied a user centered, rapid prototyping methodology with 12 information visualization students and 15 GPs. We evaluated the final design using the evaluation framework by O’Leary et al., as well as a System Usability Scale questionnaire. Results indicate that there is indeed a need for a follow-up tool and that a dashboard is a right kind of tool. Our proof-of-concept shows useful insights into patient records and can indeed help GPs recognize patients in need of follow-up. The major strengths of the design are the ease with which GPs can query patient records using interactive visualizations, such as parallel coordinates, and the ability to check if the number of patients diagnosed with certain diseases differs from the amount predicted in evidence-based guidelines.
Medical dashboard - case study Robin De CroonRobin De Croon
Auxiliary slides I used work during the infovis course of prof. Erik Duval, containing a high level overview of the rationale of my current medical dashboard.
A paradigm shift of GP generations and the implications on the evaluation of ...Robin De Croon
Pecha Kucha presented during the workshop on designing the future of mobile healthcare support in Toronto during MobileHCI.
http://www3.ocadu.ca/mobilehealthcare/
Visualizing quantified self and objective patient dataRobin De Croon
Slides for the Doctoral Consortium at IEEE ICHI 2014 in Verona: http://ichi2014.di.univr.it/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/The-Doctoral-Consortium-of-ICHI-2014-Programme.pdf
Medical Technology Tackles New Health Care Demand - Research Report - March 2...pchutichetpong
M Capital Group (“MCG”) predicts that with, against, despite, and even without the global pandemic, the medical technology (MedTech) industry shows signs of continuous healthy growth, driven by smaller, faster, and cheaper devices, growing demand for home-based applications, technological innovation, strategic acquisitions, investments, and SPAC listings. MCG predicts that this should reflects itself in annual growth of over 6%, well beyond 2028.
According to Chris Mouchabhani, Managing Partner at M Capital Group, “Despite all economic scenarios that one may consider, beyond overall economic shocks, medical technology should remain one of the most promising and robust sectors over the short to medium term and well beyond 2028.”
There is a movement towards home-based care for the elderly, next generation scanning and MRI devices, wearable technology, artificial intelligence incorporation, and online connectivity. Experts also see a focus on predictive, preventive, personalized, participatory, and precision medicine, with rising levels of integration of home care and technological innovation.
The average cost of treatment has been rising across the board, creating additional financial burdens to governments, healthcare providers and insurance companies. According to MCG, cost-per-inpatient-stay in the United States alone rose on average annually by over 13% between 2014 to 2021, leading MedTech to focus research efforts on optimized medical equipment at lower price points, whilst emphasizing portability and ease of use. Namely, 46% of the 1,008 medical technology companies in the 2021 MedTech Innovator (“MTI”) database are focusing on prevention, wellness, detection, or diagnosis, signaling a clear push for preventive care to also tackle costs.
In addition, there has also been a lasting impact on consumer and medical demand for home care, supported by the pandemic. Lockdowns, closure of care facilities, and healthcare systems subjected to capacity pressure, accelerated demand away from traditional inpatient care. Now, outpatient care solutions are driving industry production, with nearly 70% of recent diagnostics start-up companies producing products in areas such as ambulatory clinics, at-home care, and self-administered diagnostics.
Leading the Way in Nephrology: Dr. David Greene's Work with Stem Cells for Ki...Dr. David Greene Arizona
As we watch Dr. Greene's continued efforts and research in Arizona, it's clear that stem cell therapy holds a promising key to unlocking new doors in the treatment of kidney disease. With each study and trial, we step closer to a world where kidney disease is no longer a life sentence but a treatable condition, thanks to pioneers like Dr. David Greene.
Empowering ACOs: Leveraging Quality Management Tools for MIPS and BeyondHealth Catalyst
Join us as we delve into the crucial realm of quality reporting for MSSP (Medicare Shared Savings Program) Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs).
In this session, we will explore how a robust quality management solution can empower your organization to meet regulatory requirements and improve processes for MIPS reporting and internal quality programs. Learn how our MeasureAble application enables compliance and fosters continuous improvement.
Defecation
Normal defecation begins with movement in the left colon, moving stool toward the anus. When stool reaches the rectum, the distention causes relaxation of the internal sphincter and an awareness of the need to defecate. At the time of defecation, the external sphincter relaxes, and abdominal muscles contract, increasing intrarectal pressure and forcing the stool out
The Valsalva maneuver exerts pressure to expel faeces through a voluntary contraction of the abdominal muscles while maintaining forced expiration against a closed airway. Patients with cardiovascular disease, glaucoma, increased intracranial pressure, or a new surgical wound are at greater risk for cardiac dysrhythmias and elevated blood pressure with the Valsalva maneuver and need to avoid straining to pass the stool.
Normal defecation is painless, resulting in passage of soft, formed stool
CONSTIPATION
Constipation is a symptom, not a disease. Improper diet, reduced fluid intake, lack of exercise, and certain medications can cause constipation. For example, patients receiving opiates for pain after surgery often require a stool softener or laxative to prevent constipation. The signs of constipation include infrequent bowel movements (less than every 3 days), difficulty passing stools, excessive straining, inability to defecate at will, and hard feaces
IMPACTION
Fecal impaction results from unrelieved constipation. It is a collection of hardened feces wedged in the rectum that a person cannot expel. In cases of severe impaction the mass extends up into the sigmoid colon.
DIARRHEA
Diarrhea is an increase in the number of stools and the passage of liquid, unformed feces. It is associated with disorders affecting digestion, absorption, and secretion in the GI tract. Intestinal contents pass through the small and large intestine too quickly to allow for the usual absorption of fluid and nutrients. Irritation within the colon results in increased mucus secretion. As a result, feces become watery, and the patient is unable to control the urge to defecate. Normally an anal bag is safe and effective in long-term treatment of patients with fecal incontinence at home, in hospice, or in the hospital. Fecal incontinence is expensive and a potentially dangerous condition in terms of contamination and risk of skin ulceration
HEMORRHOIDS
Hemorrhoids are dilated, engorged veins in the lining of the rectum. They are either external or internal.
FLATULENCE
As gas accumulates in the lumen of the intestines, the bowel wall stretches and distends (flatulence). It is a common cause of abdominal fullness, pain, and cramping. Normally intestinal gas escapes through the mouth (belching) or the anus (passing of flatus)
FECAL INCONTINENCE
Fecal incontinence is the inability to control passage of feces and gas from the anus. Incontinence harms a patient’s body image
PREPARATION AND GIVING OF LAXATIVESACCORDING TO POTTER AND PERRY,
An enema is the instillation of a solution into the rectum and sig
Global launch of the Healthy Ageing and Prevention Index 2nd wave – alongside...ILC- UK
The Healthy Ageing and Prevention Index is an online tool created by ILC that ranks countries on six metrics including, life span, health span, work span, income, environmental performance, and happiness. The Index helps us understand how well countries have adapted to longevity and inform decision makers on what must be done to maximise the economic benefits that comes with living well for longer.
Alongside the 77th World Health Assembly in Geneva on 28 May 2024, we launched the second version of our Index, allowing us to track progress and give new insights into what needs to be done to keep populations healthier for longer.
The speakers included:
Professor Orazio Schillaci, Minister of Health, Italy
Dr Hans Groth, Chairman of the Board, World Demographic & Ageing Forum
Professor Ilona Kickbusch, Founder and Chair, Global Health Centre, Geneva Graduate Institute and co-chair, World Health Summit Council
Dr Natasha Azzopardi Muscat, Director, Country Health Policies and Systems Division, World Health Organisation EURO
Dr Marta Lomazzi, Executive Manager, World Federation of Public Health Associations
Dr Shyam Bishen, Head, Centre for Health and Healthcare and Member of the Executive Committee, World Economic Forum
Dr Karin Tegmark Wisell, Director General, Public Health Agency of Sweden
The Importance of Community Nursing Care.pdfAD Healthcare
NDIS and Community 24/7 Nursing Care is a specific type of support that may be provided under the NDIS for individuals with complex medical needs who require ongoing nursing care in a community setting, such as their home or a supported accommodation facility.
How many patients does case series should have In comparison to case reports.pdfpubrica101
Pubrica’s team of researchers and writers create scientific and medical research articles, which may be important resources for authors and practitioners. Pubrica medical writers assist you in creating and revising the introduction by alerting the reader to gaps in the chosen study subject. Our professionals understand the order in which the hypothesis topic is followed by the broad subject, the issue, and the backdrop.
https://pubrica.com/academy/case-study-or-series/how-many-patients-does-case-series-should-have-in-comparison-to-case-reports/
Antibiotic Stewardship by Anushri Srivastava.pptxAnushriSrivastav
Stewardship is the act of taking good care of something.
Antimicrobial stewardship is a coordinated program that promotes the appropriate use of antimicrobials (including antibiotics), improves patient outcomes, reduces microbial resistance, and decreases the spread of infections caused by multidrug-resistant organisms.
WHO launched the Global Antimicrobial Resistance and Use Surveillance System (GLASS) in 2015 to fill knowledge gaps and inform strategies at all levels.
ACCORDING TO apic.org,
Antimicrobial stewardship is a coordinated program that promotes the appropriate use of antimicrobials (including antibiotics), improves patient outcomes, reduces microbial resistance, and decreases the spread of infections caused by multidrug-resistant organisms.
ACCORDING TO pewtrusts.org,
Antibiotic stewardship refers to efforts in doctors’ offices, hospitals, long term care facilities, and other health care settings to ensure that antibiotics are used only when necessary and appropriate
According to WHO,
Antimicrobial stewardship is a systematic approach to educate and support health care professionals to follow evidence-based guidelines for prescribing and administering antimicrobials
In 1996, John McGowan and Dale Gerding first applied the term antimicrobial stewardship, where they suggested a causal association between antimicrobial agent use and resistance. They also focused on the urgency of large-scale controlled trials of antimicrobial-use regulation employing sophisticated epidemiologic methods, molecular typing, and precise resistance mechanism analysis.
Antimicrobial Stewardship(AMS) refers to the optimal selection, dosing, and duration of antimicrobial treatment resulting in the best clinical outcome with minimal side effects to the patients and minimal impact on subsequent resistance.
According to the 2019 report, in the US, more than 2.8 million antibiotic-resistant infections occur each year, and more than 35000 people die. In addition to this, it also mentioned that 223,900 cases of Clostridoides difficile occurred in 2017, of which 12800 people died. The report did not include viruses or parasites
VISION
Being proactive
Supporting optimal animal and human health
Exploring ways to reduce overall use of antimicrobials
Using the drugs that prevent and treat disease by killing microscopic organisms in a responsible way
GOAL
to prevent the generation and spread of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Doing so will preserve the effectiveness of these drugs in animals and humans for years to come.
being to preserve human and animal health and the effectiveness of antimicrobial medications.
to implement a multidisciplinary approach in assembling a stewardship team to include an infectious disease physician, a clinical pharmacist with infectious diseases training, infection preventionist, and a close collaboration with the staff in the clinical microbiology laboratory
to prevent antimicrobial overuse, misuse and abuse.
to minimize the developme
1. HUMAN
COMPUTER
INTERACTION
TECHNIQUES
FOR
AWARENESS,
REFLECTION
AND
SENSE-‐MAKING
ir.
Robin
De
Croon
@robindecroon
&
robindecroon.wordpress.com
Supervisor:
Prof.
dr.
ir.
Erik
Duval
Co-‐Supervisor:
Dr.
Joris
Klerkx
21/02/15
1
2. Secure
&
Usable
medical
applications
in
the
cloud
(MAPC)
•
My
function:
mobile
application
for
physicians
•
Different
prototypes
•
4
paper
prototypes
(14
physicians)
•
1
digital
prototypes
(already
1
physician)
21/02/15
2
3. Initial
research
Quantified
self
• Get
familiar
with
tracking
data
•
Look
at
existing
research
Medical
software/world
• Get
familiar
with
medical
world
• Existing
HIS
software
21/02/15
3
5. Participatory
design
approach
•
Comparative
study
•
Functional
requirements
•
Quantitative
data
•
Usability
questionnaire
(e.g.
SUS)
21/02/15
5
A.
Bangor,
P.
Kortum,
and
J.
Miller,
“Determining
what
individual
SUS
scores
mean:
Adding
an
adjective
rating
scale,”
Journal
of
usability
studies,
vol.
4,
no.
3,
pp.
114–123,
2009.
http://semanticstudios.com/publications/semantics/000029.php
7. 5
requirements
1. Immediatelty
available
2. Use
mobile
affordances
3. Quick
overview
most
important
data
4. Quick
and
easy
input
method
5. Motivation
to
e-‐prescribe
21/02/15
7
8. Workflow
•
Information
•
Messages
•
SOAP
subjective,
objective,
assessment,
planning
• Medication
21/02/15
8
Robin
De
Croon