General
The International Medical Informatics Association (IMIA) is the world body for health
and biomedical informatics. As an ‘association of associations’, IMIA acts as a bridging
organization to bring together its constituent organizations and their members. IMIA
provides leadership and expertise to the multidisciplinary, health focused community
and to policy makers, to enable the transformation of healthcare in accord with the
worldwide vision of improving the health of the world population. Inherent in IMIA's
role is to bring together, from a global perspective, scientists, researchers, users,
vendors, developers, consultants and suppliers in an environment of cooperation and
sharing.
IMIA was established as an independent, not for profit organization under Swiss law
in 1989. IMIA was originally founded in 1967 as Technical Committee 4 of the International
Federation for Information Processing (IFIP). Since 1979, IMIA has evolved from a
Special Interest Group of IFIP to its current status as a fully independent international
organization. It continues to maintain its relationship with IFIP as an affiliate
organization and has an appointed Liaison Officer. IMIA also has close and collaborative
ties with the World Health Organization (WHO) as a NGO (Non Government Organization)
in official relations, with appointed Liaison Officers from both the WHO and IMIA.
IMIA is also a Liaison A category organization in cooperation with the International
Organization for Standardization (ISO).
The working language of IMIA is English.
Vision
The IMIA vision is that there will be a worldwide systems approach for healthcare.
Clinicians, researchers, patients and people in general will be supported by informatics
tools, processes and behaviours that make it easy to do the right thing, in the right
way, at the right time to improve health care for all. This systems approach will
incorporate and integrate research, clinical care and public health. To achieve this
vision, it will require everyone being supported by informatics- based information
and communication systems and technologies. This vision is described in the IMIA Strategic
Plan.
IMIA will fulfil its vision by:
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Being the scientific informatics association through which the world's knowledge leaders
come together to effectively and efficiently create, assemble, integrate, synthesize
or assimilate intellectual knowledge that is required worldwide to advance biomedical
informatics in its role of improving health and healthcare
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Being the informatics association that effectively and efficiently connects people
and the nations of the world to be able to accomplish the above purpose.
Membership
IMIA membership consists of Member Societies, Institutional and Affiliate Members,
Honorary Fellows and Corresponding Members.
Member Societies are generally societies with individual membership, or similar appropriate
bodies, which are representative of the biomedical and health informatics activities
within a country. In general, only one Member Society is admitted from a country,
although in special circumstances, and as approved by the IMIA General Assembly, a
country may have more than one Member Society in IMIA. In the absence of a Member
Society, IMIA accommodates involvement by individuals through “Corresponding” membership,
in particular for developing countries as a means of providing encouragement and support
to form a representative Member Society. Information about Member Societies is on
the IMIA website, and IMIA assists in promoting the activities and events of its members
through the IMIA News site and other channels.
IMIA Member Societies may organize into regional groups. IMIA regions exist for all
parts of the world; Asia/Pacific (APAMI), Europe (EFMI), Latin America and the Caribbean
(IMIA-LAC), Africa (HELINA), North America (Canada and the U.S.A.) and the Middle
East (currently under a re-organization). Regions are represented at the IMIA General
Assembly and Board by Vice Presidents appointed by their respective regional organizations.
Institutional Members include academic institutions, corporations, and other bodies. Corporate members
can include vendors, consulting, and technology firms, publishers and other professional
organizations. Academic members include universities, medical centres, research centres
and other similar institutions. IMIA encourages academic members to meet on an annual
basis in conjunction with the IMIA General Assembly, to heighten connectivity and
deal with areas of mutual interest.
Affiliate Members consist of international organizations that share an interest in the broad field
of health and biomedical informatics. In addition to the WHO and IFIP, the International
Federation of Health Information Management Associations (IFHIMA) is an affiliate
member of IMIA. IMIA has Liaison Officers to WHO , to IFIP, and to ISO, who are working
collaboratively on activities and projects of mutual interest.
Honorary Fellows are individuals who have demonstrated exceptional meritorious service in furthering
the aims and interests of IMIA; fellowship is conferred for life.
Working and Special Interest Groups provide opportunities for collaboration among individuals who share common interests
in a particular focal field. IMIA currently has two Special Interest Groups (Nursing
Informatics and the Francophone SIG). Many of IMIA's 25 active Working and Special
Interest Groups hold working conferences on leading edge and timely health, medical
and biomedical informatics issues.
Governance
IMIA is governed by a General Assembly, which meets annually. It consists of one representative
from each IMIA Member Society and Institutional Member, Honorary Fellows, chairs of
IMIA's Working Groups and SIGs, and representatives from Affiliate Members (the WHO,
IFIP, IFHIMA), and each of IMIA's Regions. Only IMIA Member Societies have full voting
rights.
The Board of IMIA, elected by the General Assembly, conducts the association's affairs.
The day-to-day operations are supported by IMIA Office and CEO. The officers of the
Board and IMIA's Vice Presidents vigorously pursue IMIA's mission to:
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Capitalize on the synergies and collective resources of IMIA's constituents.
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Minimize fragmentation between scientific and professional medical informaticians.
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Ensure successful adaptation to changes in the medical informatics marketplace and
discipline.
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Raise the profile and awareness of IMIA within and outside of the IMIA organization.
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Encourage cooperation between the scientific and commercial health informatics communities.
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Equitably balance support to emerging and existing IMIA members.
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Establish and maintain cooperation and harmony with organizations that emerge to address
medical informatics issues.
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Continue to position IMIA as the facilitator of medical informatics issues in the
international community.
MedInfo and NI Congress
IMIA organizes the internationally acclaimed “World Congress on Medical and Health
Informatics”, MedInfo. MedInfo 2017 was held in Hangzhou, China, and was hosted by
the Chinese Medical Informatics Association, CMIA.
Previous MedInfo events have been held in Stockholm, Sweden (1974), Toronto, Canada,
(1977), Tokyo, Japan (1980), Amsterdam, The Netherlands (1983), Washington, USA (1986),
Beijing/ Singapore (1989), Geneva, Switzerland (1992), Vancouver, Canada (1995), Seoul,
Korea (1998), London, UK (2001), San Francisco, USA (2004), Brisbane, Australia (2007),
Cape Town, South Africa (2010), Copenhagen, Denmark (2013), Sao Paulo, Brazil (2015),
and Hangzhou, China (2017).
Medlnfo 2019 will be held in Lyon, France and hosted by the French Medical Informatics
Association (Association Française d'Informatique Médicale (AIM) from August 26-30,
2019. In 2021, MedInfo will be held in Sydney, Australia, hosted by HISA, the Health
Informatics Society of Australia (Australia's Digital Health Community).
The NI (nursing informatics) Congress has been held since 1982, under the auspices
of the IMIA Special Interest Group in Nursing Informatics (IMIA NI SIG). The first
NI Congress was held in London, UK, followed by Calgary, Canada (1985), Dublin, Ireland
(1988), Melbourne, Australia (1991), San Antonio, Texas, USA (1994), Stockholm, Sweden
(1997), Auckland, New Zealand (2000), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (2003), Seoul, Korea
(2006), Helsinki, Finland (2009), Montreal, Canada (2012), Taipei, Taiwan (2014),
Geneva, Switzerland (2016) and Guadalajara, Mexico (2018). NI2020 will be held in
Brisbane, Australia.
IMIA Code of Ethics
IMIA adopted the “IMIA Code of Ethics for Health Information Professionals” in 2002.
The code has been translated into several languages, and is freely available to the
public at IMIA's website. The updated 2016 IMIA Code of Ethics for Health Information
Professionals were approved by IMIA's General Assembly on August 28th, 2016 in Munich,
Germany. IMIA acknowledges great appreciation of the revision of the “code” to Dr.
Eike-Henner W. Kluge, Professor of the Department of Philosophy at the University
of Victoria in Victoria, BC, Canada, for his time and dedication in providing IMIA
with this valued document. The updated version and accompanying handbook are available
on the IMIA website at http://imia-medinfo.org/wp/imia-code-of-ethics/.
Official Journals
Four scientific publications have been accorded the status of “an Official Journal
of the International Medical Informatics Association: Methods of Information in Medicine
(Schattauer Publishers Stuttgart); Applied Clinical Informatics (Schattauer Publishers
Stuttgart); International Journal of Medical Informatics (Elsevier); and Informatics
for Health and Social Care.
New Initiatives and Activities
An important aspect of IMIA is the development and strengthening of our partnerships
and synergies, both within IMIA's community, and by reaching out to other organizations,
in particular in the fields of standards and global health. IMIA will also leverage
the capacity and diversity of our members and of our regions, which represent the
true richness of IMIA. IMIA seeks to continually develop appropriate new initiatives.
Communications and Interaction
IMIA continues to develop its communication with members and others through its website
(www.imia.org); this contains profiles of its members, working groups and activities. IMIA is constantly
striving to improve the services it provides to its members and the informatics community
in general by promoting free interaction among and between its member network and
the biomedical and health informatics community at large. IMIA publishes newsletters
several times a year along with timely announcements to its members and contacts.
Through input from the IMIA Social Media Working Group, further modes of interaction
with and between IMIA members and the wider global health and biomedical informatics
communities are being developed.
IMIA has presences on social media sites, including Twitter (@IMIAtweets), Facebook
and LinkedIn, and continues to explore new methods of access to information.