Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

October 15, 2011

Making Sense of Unstructured Data in Medicine Using Ontologies – October 19th

Filed under: Bioinformatics,Biomedical,Ontology — Patrick Durusau @ 4:30 pm

From the email announcement:

The next NCBO Webinar will be presented by Dr. Nigam Shah from Stanford University on “Making Sense of Unstructured Data in Medicine Using Ontologies” at 10:00am PT, Wednesday, October 19. Below is information on how to join the online meeting via WebEx and accompanying teleconference. For the full schedule of the NCBO Webinar presentations see: http://www.bioontology.org/webinar-series.

ABSTRACT:

Changes in biomedical science, public policy, information technology, and electronic heath record (EHR) adoption have converged recently to enable a transformation in the delivery, efficiency, and effectiveness of health care. While analyzing structured electronic records have proven useful in many different contexts, the true richness and complexity of health records—roughly 80 percent—lies within the clinical notes, which are free-text reports written by doctors and nurses in their daily practice. We have developed a scalable annotation and analysis workflow that uses public biomedical ontologies and is based on the term recognition tools developed by the National Center for Biomedical Ontology (NCBO). This talk will discuss the applications of this workflow to 9.5 million clinical documents—from the electronic health records of approximately one million adult patients from the STRIDE Clinical Data Warehouse—to identify statistically significant patterns of drug use and to conduct drug safety surveillance. For the patterns of drug use, we validate the usage patterns learned from the data against FDA-approved indications as well as external sources of known off-label use such as Medi-Span. For drug safety surveillance, we show that drug–disease co-occurrences and the temporal ordering of drugs and disease mentions in clinical notes can be examined for statistical enrichment and used to detect potential adverse events.

WEBEX DETAILS:
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To join the online meeting (Now from mobile devices!)
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1. Go to https://stanford.webex.com/stanford/j.php?ED=108527772&UID=0&PW=NZDdmNWNjOGMw&RT=MiM0
2. If requested, enter your name and email address.
3. If a password is required, enter the meeting password: ncbo
4. Click “Join”.

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To join the audio conference only
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To receive a call back, provide your phone number when you join the meeting, or call the number below and enter the access code.
Call-in toll number (US/Canada): 1-650-429-3300
Global call-in numbers: https://stanford.webex.com/stanford/globalcallin.php?serviceType=MC&ED=108527772&tollFree=0

Access code:929 613 752

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