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Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association 7:444-452 (2000)
© 2000 American Medical Informatics Association


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Electronic Health Record Meets Digital Library

A New Environment for Achieving an Old Goal

Betsy L. Humphreys, MLS

Affiliation of the author: Library of Medicine, Bethesda, Maryland.

Correspondence and reprints: Betsy L. Humphreys, MLS, National Library of Medicine, 8600 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD 20894; e-mail: <blh{at}nlm.nih.gov>.

Abstract Linking the electronic health record to the digital library is a Web-era reformulation of the long-standing informatics goal of seamless integration of automated clinical data and relevant knowledge-based information to support informed decisions. The spread of the Internet, the development of the World Wide Web, and converging format standards for electronic health data and digital publications make effective linking increasingly feasible. Some existing systems link electronic health data and knowledge-based information in limited settings or limited ways. Yet many challenging informatics research problems remain to be solved before flexible and seamless linking becomes a reality and before systems become capable of delivering the specific piece of information needed at the time and place a decision must be made.

Connecting the electronic health record to the digital library also requires positive resolution of important policy issues, including health data privacy, government envouragement of high-speed communications, electronic intellectual property rights, and standards for health data and for digital libraries. Both the research problems and the policy issues should be important priorities for the field of medical informatics.




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