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J Am Med Inform Assoc. 1999;6:267-271. DOI .
© 1999 American Medical Informatics Association


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Informatics at the National Institues of Health

A Call to Action

William R. Hendee, PhD

Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Corresdpondence and reprints: William R. Hendee, PhD, Medical College of Wisconsin, ORTI, 8701 Watertown Plank Road, Milwaukee, WI 53226. e-mail: <whendee{at}mcw.edu >.

Received for publication: 01/13/99; accepted for publication: 03/23/99.

Biomedical informatics, imaging, and engineering are major forces driving the knowledge revolutions that are shaping the agendas for biomedical research and clinical medicine in the 21st century. These disciplines produce the tools and techniques to advance biomedical research, and continually feed new technologies and procedures into clinical medicine. To sustain this force, an increased investment is needed in the physics, biomedical science, engineering, mathematics, information science, and computer science undergirding biomedical informatics, engineering, and imaging. This investment should be made primarily through the National Institutes of Health (NIH). However, the NIH is not structured to support such disciplines as biomedical informatics, engineering, and imaging that cross boundaries between disease- and organ-oriented institutes. The solution to this dilemma is the creation of a new institute or center at the NIH devoted to biomedical imaging, engineering, and informatics. Bills are being introduced into the 106th Congress to authorize such an entity. The pathway is long and arduous, from the introduction of bills in the House and Senate to the realization of new opportunities for biomedical informatics, engineering, and imaging at the NIH. There are many opportunities for medical informaticians to contribute to this realization.




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Copyright © 1999 by the American Medical Informatics Association.