Yearb Med Inform 2016; 25(S 01): S32-S41
DOI: 10.15265/IYS-2016-s037
Original Article
Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart

Health Concept and Knowledge Management: Twenty-five Years of Evolution

R. Cornet
1   Academic Medical Center – University of Amsterdam, Department of Medical Informatics, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
2   Linköping University, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Linköping, Sweden
,
C. G. Chute
3   Johns Hopkins Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Division of General Internal Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21287, USA
› Institutsangaben
Weitere Informationen

Correspondence to:

Ronald Cornet, PhD
Visiting Associate Professor, Linköping University
Assistant Professor, Academisch Medisch Centrum
Medical Informatics, J1b-115
P.O. Box 22700
1100 DE Amsterdam
The Netherlands

Christopher G. Chute, MD DrPH
Bloomberg Distinguished Professor of Health Informatics
Professor of Medicine, Public Health, and Nursing
Chief Research Information Officer, Johns Hopkins Medicine
Johns Hopkins University, Division of General Internal Medicine
2024 E Monument St, Suite 1-200
Baltimore, MD 21287
USA

Publikationsverlauf

02. August 2016

Publikationsdatum:
06. März 2018 (online)

 

Summary

Objectives: The fields of health terminology, classification, ontology, and related information models have evolved dramatically over the past 25 years. Our objective was to review notable trends, described emerging or enabling technologies, and highlight major terminology systems during the interval.

Methods: We review the progression in health terminology systems informed by our own experiences as part of the community involved in this work, reinforced with literature review and citation.

Results: The transformation in size, scope, complexity, and adoption of health terminological systems and information models has been tremendous, on the scale of orders of magnitude.

Conclusion: The present “big science” era of inference and discovery in biomedicine would not have been possible or scalable absent the growth and maturation of health terminology systems and information models over the past 25 years.


#

 


#

Correspondence to:

Ronald Cornet, PhD
Visiting Associate Professor, Linköping University
Assistant Professor, Academisch Medisch Centrum
Medical Informatics, J1b-115
P.O. Box 22700
1100 DE Amsterdam
The Netherlands

Christopher G. Chute, MD DrPH
Bloomberg Distinguished Professor of Health Informatics
Professor of Medicine, Public Health, and Nursing
Chief Research Information Officer, Johns Hopkins Medicine
Johns Hopkins University, Division of General Internal Medicine
2024 E Monument St, Suite 1-200
Baltimore, MD 21287
USA