Texas Technology - Fall 2008 - (Page 22) health by Patrick Michels Standing Alone Houston benefits as the home of the country’s only school devoted entirely to health-information science. University of Texas School of Health Information Sciences at Houston. devoted to improving the way information is collected, analyzed and shared. Emergency preparedness officials teamed with the University of Texas School of Health Information Sciences at Houston, the only school in the nation devoted entirely to biomedical informatics, the science of handling medical information. Studying Medical Informatics Improving Houston’s evacuation registry became just one part of a broad public health initiative called HealthQuilt, run by one of the school’s professors, Dr. Kim Dunn. Dunn’s project is a public health application. Along with preparing the medical support system for disasters, the project also aims to improve the exchange of health information and bring more specialty health care to the public health sector through telemedicine. A guiding principle at the school is strengthening the medical system by working at the intersection of several different fields. The school itself is grounded in engineering, biomedicine, computer science and cognitive science. The school’s academics say the flexibility to incorporate each area to varying degrees and also branch out into other fields, when appropriate, is something not possible at other universities with less-independent medical information science programs. “Medical informatics is a unique discipline that has a set of tools that can be used in all these contexts,” said Dr. Jack W. Smith, the school’s dean. “I think we’re certainly pioneers in creating a school that tries to tackle data info and knowledge problems across all these disciplines — biomedical discovery, health care and Photo courtesy of the University of Texas A fter watching hurricanes blow in from the Gulf of Mexico for so many years, Houston officials had a good sense of how the city’s land reacts. They knew which areas will flood first, how severely and for how long. But when it came to predicting how the population will be affected, they knew their data could be better. One major concern was identifying the people who, for health reasons, would need extra help during an evacuation. “Having data for who lives where, in terms of their vulnerabilities, gives you the ability to plan ahead for the type and quantity of supplies, and craft the messages that we need to get out to those folks,” said Frank Levy, bureau chief of Public Health Preparedness at the Houston Department of Health and Human Services. Though the city had already set up an emergency registry system, few of Houston’s at-risk residents were signed up. Officials learned quickly that mapping the city’s human landscape would require a more active effort. It would take an understanding of the community resources that could encourage people to sign up for the registry, and it would require a scientifically sound method for projecting that data across the entire population. To analyze the data, the city found the right institution for the job in a unique school on the city’s southwest side that’s 22_TexasTechnology
For optimal viewing of this digital publication, please enable JavaScript and then refresh the page. If you would like to try to load the digital publication without using Flash Player detection, please click here.