Health Datapalooza 2013: Illuminating Disease at the Speed of Light - Michael...Health Data Consortium
Health Datapalooza IV: June 3rd-4th, 2013
Illuminating Disease at the Speed of Light: How Big Data Is Accelerating Biomedical Research
Convener:
Marcia A. Kean, Chairman, Strategic Initiatives, Feinstein Kean Healthcare
Moderator:
Kevin Davies, Author, “The $1,000 Genome”; Founding Editor, Nature Genetics and Bio-IT World magazine; and Vice President Business Development, American Chemical Society
Speakers:
Amy P. Abernethy, Director, Center for Learning Healthcare (CLHC), Duke Clinical Research Institute
Michael Cantor, Senior Director, Information Strategy and Analytics, World Research Development, Pfizer
Dave King, Founder, Exaptive
Robert McBurney, Chief Executive Officer, Accelerated Cure Project for Multiple Sclerosis
Dietrich Stephan, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Silicon Valley Biosystems (SV Bio)
Until recently, biomedical research was conducted in small silos, separated by huge cultural and technical walls and inability to exchange data facilely. But the field is now exploding: massive amounts of complex, multi-dimensional clinical, imaging, and genomic data are being collected, aggregated, integrated, analyzed, and shared. The pioneers driving this digital transformation are working in novel collaborations among patients, providers, and scientists. In this session, speakers will showcase multimodal, computational, and analytic tools for biomarker discovery, patient stratification, and intelligent clinical decision solutions; high-speed genome profiling, with algorithms of individual and population profiles, for real-time molecular-based diagnoses of ‘mystery’ diseases; a point-of-care quality monitoring program used by clinicians, in which data are used for important research questions and then transitioned into clinical trials; and collection and aggregation of data and samples from patients with a neurological disease, enabling queries into markers of disease origins and discovery of new therapies.
Liberating Health Data: What we learned in New York, with Dr. Nirav ShahHealth Data Consortium
You can watch this webinar at: http://www.screencast.com/t/CA4ROcdVdo
Dr. Nirav Shah from the New York State Health Department (NYS) discussed lessons learned in providing open access to state health data and why such innovation in health care is critical in this era of health reform for the Health Data Consortium's inaugural webinar. In March 2013, New York State launched health.data.ny.gov and became one of the first states in the country to liberate health data from its files. NYS’s health data website aims to support the Triple Aim: improve individual care, improve population health, and lower costs, and may also create business opportunities that allow developers to use this data to develop new apps that can benefit health.
This webinar also led into the HDC event, Putting Health Data to Work in Our States and Communities, which took place in Chicago on Friday, November 8. Take a look at out our blog to learn more about this thought-providing, invigorating day for health data.
Discover more health data resources on our website at http://www.healthdataconsortium.org/
Health Datapalooza 2013: Illuminating Disease at the Speed of Light - Michael...Health Data Consortium
Health Datapalooza IV: June 3rd-4th, 2013
Illuminating Disease at the Speed of Light: How Big Data Is Accelerating Biomedical Research
Convener:
Marcia A. Kean, Chairman, Strategic Initiatives, Feinstein Kean Healthcare
Moderator:
Kevin Davies, Author, “The $1,000 Genome”; Founding Editor, Nature Genetics and Bio-IT World magazine; and Vice President Business Development, American Chemical Society
Speakers:
Amy P. Abernethy, Director, Center for Learning Healthcare (CLHC), Duke Clinical Research Institute
Michael Cantor, Senior Director, Information Strategy and Analytics, World Research Development, Pfizer
Dave King, Founder, Exaptive
Robert McBurney, Chief Executive Officer, Accelerated Cure Project for Multiple Sclerosis
Dietrich Stephan, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Silicon Valley Biosystems (SV Bio)
Until recently, biomedical research was conducted in small silos, separated by huge cultural and technical walls and inability to exchange data facilely. But the field is now exploding: massive amounts of complex, multi-dimensional clinical, imaging, and genomic data are being collected, aggregated, integrated, analyzed, and shared. The pioneers driving this digital transformation are working in novel collaborations among patients, providers, and scientists. In this session, speakers will showcase multimodal, computational, and analytic tools for biomarker discovery, patient stratification, and intelligent clinical decision solutions; high-speed genome profiling, with algorithms of individual and population profiles, for real-time molecular-based diagnoses of ‘mystery’ diseases; a point-of-care quality monitoring program used by clinicians, in which data are used for important research questions and then transitioned into clinical trials; and collection and aggregation of data and samples from patients with a neurological disease, enabling queries into markers of disease origins and discovery of new therapies.
Liberating Health Data: What we learned in New York, with Dr. Nirav ShahHealth Data Consortium
You can watch this webinar at: http://www.screencast.com/t/CA4ROcdVdo
Dr. Nirav Shah from the New York State Health Department (NYS) discussed lessons learned in providing open access to state health data and why such innovation in health care is critical in this era of health reform for the Health Data Consortium's inaugural webinar. In March 2013, New York State launched health.data.ny.gov and became one of the first states in the country to liberate health data from its files. NYS’s health data website aims to support the Triple Aim: improve individual care, improve population health, and lower costs, and may also create business opportunities that allow developers to use this data to develop new apps that can benefit health.
This webinar also led into the HDC event, Putting Health Data to Work in Our States and Communities, which took place in Chicago on Friday, November 8. Take a look at out our blog to learn more about this thought-providing, invigorating day for health data.
Discover more health data resources on our website at http://www.healthdataconsortium.org/