健康科学在线:八+革命和十+简要分析

E. Frank
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We outline eight potential revolutionary areas for HSO: health sciences education, disease surveillance, public health ethics, integrity, needs assessments, telemedicine, local professional opportunities, and funding. HSO also responds to the World Health Organization's March 2008 \"10 Facts on Health Workforce Crisis,\" and we briefly analyze these facts and HSO's responses in our concluding analysis section. Conclusion: HSO has the potential to revolutionize health sciences knowledge, as well as multiple other areas in medicine, public health, and other health professions. The problem: there are many outstanding computerbased resources for health sciences education, but good materials are difficult to find in the flood of mediocre and questionably-sourced resources, and many good materials are currently password-protected. This article comments on a solution to some of these problems: Health Sciences Online. HSO is the only health sciences website (www.hso.info) with comprehensive, free, high-quality, ad-free, and current courses, references, and other resources. HSO already includes >50,000 such resources, searchable in and with text translated into 22 languages, but it is not just a huge, screened online library. Below we outline eight potential revolutionary areas for HSO: health sciences education, disease surveillance, public health ethics, integrity, needs assessments, telemedicine, local professional opportunities, and funding. HSO also responds to the World Health Organization’s March 2008 “10 Facts on Health Workforce Crisis,” [1] and we briefly analyze these facts and HSO’s responses in our concluding analysis section. HSO is a virtual learning center designed for health scientists in training and practice, founded in 2001 (by the author) and officially launched in 2008. It provides browsable and searchable access to materials donated, hosted, and maintained by our distinguished content partners. Founding collaborators and funders for this site include WHO, World Bank, NATO, the Canadian government, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the World Medical Association, and others, with materials and collaborations from governments, professional societies, businesses, *Address correspondence to this author at the University of British Columbia, 5804 Fairview Avenue, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z3, Canada; E-mail: efrank@emory.edu and universities such as Columbia, Cornell, Emory, Harvard, Johns Hopkins, MIT, the University of British Columbia, and thousands of others. While other open source (and many for profit) health science information sites exist, HSO uniquely includes most of the high quality electronic learning objects that are ad-free and freely available across the health sciences. It also includes resources previously unavailable to the public that were directly obtained from universities and other scientific organizations providing accredited continuing education. Additionally, all our materials were individually screened by health professionals to include only resources that are relevant to the health sciences, independently useful as a teaching or learning tool, from a credible source that is accredited for health provider education, free of advertising, current, user-friendly, and cost-free to our users. HEALTH SCIENCES EDUCATION AND TRAINING Through HSO, the entire computerized world has free access to a comprehensive collection of top quality courses and references in medicine, public health, dentistry, pharmacy, nutrition, and other basic and clinical disciplines. Those with only occasional online or flash drive access can download materials for subsequent use. There is also free and compatible access through mobile phones. WHO’s 2006 “Building Foundations for E-Health” stated that “HSO is expected to make a significant contribution to global collaborations on e-learning [2];” we hope that education and training will be the first HSO-based revolution, and will produce more trained health care workers for underserved populations; to that end, we are developing a community-based health sciences university. Specifically, here are two examples of active partnerships to promote HSO’s use that are already underway. Working 2 The Open Medical Education Journal, 2008, Volume 1 Erica Frank through a NATO Science for Peace grant to HSO, Armenian and Georgian physicians have received needs assessments, and they are receiving training on using HSO in their work settings, with feedback to HSO staff to refine this tool and its usage, including creating new physician training programs. And with Latin American partners, we are designing public health and medical curricula with dozens of courses and hundreds of references to choose from, and creating virtual educational and training programs. DISEASE SURVEILLANCE We are also modernizing outbreak and chronic disease surveillance. Our search engine (Vivisimo) logs search terms (automatically translatable into ICD disease coding), and can identify internet provider, and latitude and longitude for every search entry. Our survey/feedback feature allows instantaneous communications with searchers entering unusual terms about the nature of their queries. For example, someone querying symptoms consistent with cutaneous anthrax could be asked a pre-programmed series of questions, such as “Are you currently seeing patients with these symptoms?” We will therefore be able to create a customized alert system to pinpoint, screen, and flag potential outbreaks, while protecting patient privacy (see below). We can also automatically and cooperatively communicate this information to the WHO, CDC, Public Health Agency of Canada, or any of the other 50 members of the International Association of National Public Health Institutes. To complement this, clinicians could upload radiographic and dermatologic images, pathologic slides, and other data, with their location identified. These findings can be geo-mapped with graphics visually representing diseases and their locations, intensity, and patterns over time. We believe that these functions will help modernize surveillance, and understand that Google Flu and CDC will also share claims of primacy in these kinds of efforts later this year. PUBLIC HEALTH ETHICS Once we institutionalize the kind of disease surveillance described in the paragraph above, we need to respond to the associated ethical issues. 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HSO is the only health sciences website (www.hso.info) with comprehensive, free, high-quality, ad-free, and current courses, references, and other resources. HSO already includes >50,000 such resources, searchable in and with text translated into 22 languages, but it is not just a huge, screened online library. Below we outline eight potential revolutionary areas for HSO: health sciences education, disease surveillance, public health ethics, integrity, needs assessments, telemedicine, local professional opportunities, and funding. HSO also responds to the World Health Organization’s March 2008 “10 Facts on Health Workforce Crisis,” [1] and we briefly analyze these facts and HSO’s responses in our concluding analysis section. HSO is a virtual learning center designed for health scientists in training and practice, founded in 2001 (by the author) and officially launched in 2008. 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WHO’s 2006 “Building Foundations for E-Health” stated that “HSO is expected to make a significant contribution to global collaborations on e-learning [2];” we hope that education and training will be the first HSO-based revolution, and will produce more trained health care workers for underserved populations; to that end, we are developing a community-based health sciences university. Specifically, here are two examples of active partnerships to promote HSO’s use that are already underway. Working 2 The Open Medical Education Journal, 2008, Volume 1 Erica Frank through a NATO Science for Peace grant to HSO, Armenian and Georgian physicians have received needs assessments, and they are receiving training on using HSO in their work settings, with feedback to HSO staff to refine this tool and its usage, including creating new physician training programs. 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引用次数: 1

摘要

目的:优秀的医学教育计算机资源很多,但在质量一般、来源有问题的资源中,很难找到好的材料,而且目前很多好的材料都有密码保护。本文介绍了一个解决这些问题的潜在方法:健康科学在线(www.hso.info)。方法:定性描述一种新的学习工具,以及它可能引发的社会变化。结果:HSO是唯一一个拥有全面、免费、优质、无广告、最新课程、参考文献等资源的健康科学网站。HSO已经包含了超过50,000个这样的资源,但它不仅仅是一个巨大的,筛选的在线图书馆。我们概述了HSO的八个潜在革命性领域:健康科学教育、疾病监测、公共卫生伦理、诚信、需求评估、远程医疗、当地专业机会和资金。HSO还回应了世界卫生组织2008年3月的“卫生人力危机的10个事实”,我们在总结分析部分简要分析了这些事实和HSO的回应。结论:HSO有可能彻底改变健康科学知识,以及医学、公共卫生和其他卫生专业的多个其他领域。问题是:健康科学教育有许多优秀的计算机资源,但在大量平庸和来源可疑的资源中很难找到好的材料,而且许多好的材料目前都有密码保护。本文评论了其中一些问题的解决方案:健康科学在线。HSO是唯一一个拥有全面、免费、高质量、无广告、最新课程、参考资料和其他资源的健康科学网站(www.hso.info)。HSO已经包含了超过50,000个这样的资源,可以搜索到22种语言的文本,但它不仅仅是一个巨大的、有筛选的在线图书馆。下面我们概述了HSO的八个潜在革命性领域:卫生科学教育、疾病监测、公共卫生伦理、诚信、需求评估、远程医疗、当地专业机会和资金。HSO还回应了世界卫生组织2008年3月的“卫生人力危机的10个事实”[1],我们在总结分析部分简要分析了这些事实和HSO的回应。HSO是一个为卫生科学家培训和实践而设计的虚拟学习中心,成立于2001年(作者),2008年正式上线。它为我们杰出的内容合作伙伴捐赠、托管和维护的材料提供可浏览和可搜索的访问。本网站的创始合作者和资助者包括世界卫生组织、世界银行、北约、加拿大政府、美国疾病控制和预防中心、世界医学协会和其他机构,并获得了来自政府、专业协会和企业的材料和合作。*与作者的通信地址为不列颠哥伦比亚大学,5804 Fairview Avenue, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z3, Canada;电邮地址:efrank@emory.edu以及哥伦比亚大学、康奈尔大学、埃默里大学、哈佛大学、约翰霍普金斯大学、麻省理工学院、不列颠哥伦比亚大学等数千所大学。虽然存在其他开源(许多是营利的)健康科学信息站点,但HSO独特地包含了大多数高质量的电子学习对象,这些对象在健康科学领域中是无广告的,免费提供的。它还包括以前公众无法获得的资源,这些资源直接从提供认可的继续教育的大学和其他科学组织获得。此外,我们所有的材料都是由卫生专业人员单独筛选的,只包括与健康科学相关的资源,作为教学或学习工具独立有用的资源,来自经卫生提供者教育认可的可靠来源,无广告,最新,用户友好,对我们的用户免费。健康科学教育和培训通过HSO,整个计算机化的世界可以免费获得医学、公共卫生、牙科、药学、营养学和其他基础和临床学科的高质量课程和参考资料的全面收集。那些只能偶尔上网或使用闪存的人可以下载资料供以后使用。通过移动电话也可以免费访问。世卫组织2006年《为电子卫生建立基础》指出,“HSO预计将对电子学习的全球合作作出重大贡献[2];”我们希望教育和培训将成为第一次以HSO为基础的革命,并将为服务不足的人口培养更多训练有素的卫生保健工作者;为此目的,我们正在发展一所以社区为基础的保健科学大学。具体来说,这里有两个正在进行的积极合作伙伴关系,以促进HSO的使用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Health Sciences Online: Eight+ Revolutions and Ten+ Brief Analyses
Objective: There are many outstanding computer-based resources for medical education, but good materials are difficult to find in the flood of mediocre and questionably-sourced resources, and many good materials are currently passwordprotected. This article introduces a potential solution to many of these problems: Health Sciences Online (www.hso.info). Method: A qualitative description of a new learning tool, and the societal changes it could precipitate. Results: HSO is the only health sciences website with comprehensive, free, high-quality, ad-free, and current courses, references, and other resources. HSO already includes >50,000 such resources, but it is not just a huge, screened online library. We outline eight potential revolutionary areas for HSO: health sciences education, disease surveillance, public health ethics, integrity, needs assessments, telemedicine, local professional opportunities, and funding. HSO also responds to the World Health Organization's March 2008 "10 Facts on Health Workforce Crisis," and we briefly analyze these facts and HSO's responses in our concluding analysis section. Conclusion: HSO has the potential to revolutionize health sciences knowledge, as well as multiple other areas in medicine, public health, and other health professions. The problem: there are many outstanding computerbased resources for health sciences education, but good materials are difficult to find in the flood of mediocre and questionably-sourced resources, and many good materials are currently password-protected. This article comments on a solution to some of these problems: Health Sciences Online. HSO is the only health sciences website (www.hso.info) with comprehensive, free, high-quality, ad-free, and current courses, references, and other resources. HSO already includes >50,000 such resources, searchable in and with text translated into 22 languages, but it is not just a huge, screened online library. Below we outline eight potential revolutionary areas for HSO: health sciences education, disease surveillance, public health ethics, integrity, needs assessments, telemedicine, local professional opportunities, and funding. HSO also responds to the World Health Organization’s March 2008 “10 Facts on Health Workforce Crisis,” [1] and we briefly analyze these facts and HSO’s responses in our concluding analysis section. HSO is a virtual learning center designed for health scientists in training and practice, founded in 2001 (by the author) and officially launched in 2008. It provides browsable and searchable access to materials donated, hosted, and maintained by our distinguished content partners. Founding collaborators and funders for this site include WHO, World Bank, NATO, the Canadian government, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the World Medical Association, and others, with materials and collaborations from governments, professional societies, businesses, *Address correspondence to this author at the University of British Columbia, 5804 Fairview Avenue, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z3, Canada; E-mail: efrank@emory.edu and universities such as Columbia, Cornell, Emory, Harvard, Johns Hopkins, MIT, the University of British Columbia, and thousands of others. While other open source (and many for profit) health science information sites exist, HSO uniquely includes most of the high quality electronic learning objects that are ad-free and freely available across the health sciences. It also includes resources previously unavailable to the public that were directly obtained from universities and other scientific organizations providing accredited continuing education. Additionally, all our materials were individually screened by health professionals to include only resources that are relevant to the health sciences, independently useful as a teaching or learning tool, from a credible source that is accredited for health provider education, free of advertising, current, user-friendly, and cost-free to our users. HEALTH SCIENCES EDUCATION AND TRAINING Through HSO, the entire computerized world has free access to a comprehensive collection of top quality courses and references in medicine, public health, dentistry, pharmacy, nutrition, and other basic and clinical disciplines. Those with only occasional online or flash drive access can download materials for subsequent use. There is also free and compatible access through mobile phones. WHO’s 2006 “Building Foundations for E-Health” stated that “HSO is expected to make a significant contribution to global collaborations on e-learning [2];” we hope that education and training will be the first HSO-based revolution, and will produce more trained health care workers for underserved populations; to that end, we are developing a community-based health sciences university. Specifically, here are two examples of active partnerships to promote HSO’s use that are already underway. Working 2 The Open Medical Education Journal, 2008, Volume 1 Erica Frank through a NATO Science for Peace grant to HSO, Armenian and Georgian physicians have received needs assessments, and they are receiving training on using HSO in their work settings, with feedback to HSO staff to refine this tool and its usage, including creating new physician training programs. And with Latin American partners, we are designing public health and medical curricula with dozens of courses and hundreds of references to choose from, and creating virtual educational and training programs. DISEASE SURVEILLANCE We are also modernizing outbreak and chronic disease surveillance. Our search engine (Vivisimo) logs search terms (automatically translatable into ICD disease coding), and can identify internet provider, and latitude and longitude for every search entry. Our survey/feedback feature allows instantaneous communications with searchers entering unusual terms about the nature of their queries. For example, someone querying symptoms consistent with cutaneous anthrax could be asked a pre-programmed series of questions, such as “Are you currently seeing patients with these symptoms?” We will therefore be able to create a customized alert system to pinpoint, screen, and flag potential outbreaks, while protecting patient privacy (see below). We can also automatically and cooperatively communicate this information to the WHO, CDC, Public Health Agency of Canada, or any of the other 50 members of the International Association of National Public Health Institutes. To complement this, clinicians could upload radiographic and dermatologic images, pathologic slides, and other data, with their location identified. These findings can be geo-mapped with graphics visually representing diseases and their locations, intensity, and patterns over time. We believe that these functions will help modernize surveillance, and understand that Google Flu and CDC will also share claims of primacy in these kinds of efforts later this year. PUBLIC HEALTH ETHICS Once we institutionalize the kind of disease surveillance described in the paragraph above, we need to respond to the associated ethical issues. Is it ethical to gather this sort of information on people without their explicit consent (it certainly is done all the time for commercial reasons)? Is it ethical not to do this sort of intervention when it has the potential to inexpensively, efficiently, and beneficently save millions of lives? We will work to resolve these issues with UBC’s Canada Research Chair in Neuroethics Judy Illes, PhD, and others. We will help define how to best reconcile, in an electronic age, patient privacy and our opportunities and duties to protect.
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