International Journal of Medical Informatics
Volume 79, Issue 9 , Pages 599-610, September 2010

Medical informatics: Past, present, future☆☆

  • Reinhold Haux

      Affiliations

    • President of IMIA (2007–2010).
    • Corresponding Author InformationTel.: +49 531 391 9500.
    web address

Peter L. Institute for Medical Informatics, University of Braunschweig – Institute of Technology and Hannover Medical School, Muehlenpfordtstr. 23, D-38106 Braunschweig, Germany

Received 24 May 2010; received in revised form 6 June 2010; accepted 6 June 2010. published online 08 July 2010.

Abstract 

Objective

To reflect about medical informatics as a discipline. To suggest significant future research directions with the purpose of stimulating further discussion.

Methods

Exploring and discussing important developments in medical informatics from the past and in the present by way of examples. Reflecting on the role of IMIA, the International Medical Informatics Association, in influencing the discipline.

Results

Medical informatics as a discipline is still young. Today, as a cross-sectional discipline, it forms one of the bases for medicine and health care. As a consequence considerable responsibility rests on medical informatics for improving the health of people, through its contributions to high-quality, efficient health care and to innovative research in biomedicine and related health and computer sciences. Current major research fields can be grouped according to the organization, application, and evaluation of health information systems, to medical knowledge representation, and to the underlying signal and data analyses and interpretations. Yet, given the fluid nature of many of the driving forces behind progress in information processing methods and their technologies, progress in medicine and health care, and the rapidly changing needs, requirements and expectations of human societies, we can expect many changes in future medical informatics research. Future research fields might range from seamless interactivity with automated data capture and storage, via informatics diagnostics and therapeutics, to living labs with data analysis methodology, involving sensor-enhanced ambient environments. The role of IMIA, the International Medical Informatics Association, for building a cooperative, strongly connected, and research-driven medical informatics community worldwide can hardly be underestimated.

Conclusions

Health care continuously changes as the underlying science and practice of health are in continuous transformation. Medical informatics as a discipline is strongly affected by these changes and is in a position to be a key, active contributor in these changes.

Keywords: Medical informatics, Health informatics, Biomedical informatics, International Medical Informatics Association, IMIA

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 Dedicated to IMIA, the International Medical Informatics Association. Besides the honour to serve in IMIA during the last 15 years as Working Group Chair, as Board Member, as co-editor of the IMIA Yearbook and, now, as its President, I am grateful for the opportunity of meeting so many exceptional people at events of IMIA and of IMIA's member societies. The author has benefited much from their knowledge and insights during the course of countless discussions.

☆☆ Written, extended version of a sequence of lectures, given on November 11, 2009, at CoMHI2009 in Hiroshima, Japan, on September 6, 2010, at gmds2010 in Mannheim, Germany, and on September 13, 2010, at Medinfo2010 in Cape Town, South Africa.

PII: S1386-5056(10)00114-0

doi:10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2010.06.003

International Journal of Medical Informatics
Volume 79, Issue 9 , Pages 599-610, September 2010