Summary
Background: In 1962, Methods of Information in Medicine (MIM) began to publish papers on the
methodology and scientific fundamentals of managing data, information, and knowledge
in biomedicine and health care. Meeting an increasing demand for research about practical
implementation of health information systems, the journal Applied Clinical Informatics
(ACI) was launched in 2009. Both journals are official journals of the International
Medical Informatics Association (IMIA).
Objectives: Based on prior analyses, we aimed to describe major topics published in MIM during
2014 and to explore whether theory of MIM influenced practice of ACI. Our objectives
were further to describe lessons learned and to discuss possible editorial policies
to improve bridging from theory to practice.
Methods: We conducted a retrospective, observational study reviewing MIM articles published
during 2014 (N=61) and analyzing reference lists of ACI articles from 2014 (N=70).
Lessons learned and opinions about MIM editorial policies were developed in consensus
by the two authors. These have been influenced by discussions with the journal’s associate
editors and editorial board members.
Results: The publication topics of MIM in 2014 were broad, covering biomedical and health
informatics, medical biometry and epidemiology. Important topics discussed were biosignal
interpretation, boosting methodologies, citation analysis, health-enabling and ambient
assistive technologies, health record banking, safety, and standards. Nine ACI practice
articles from 2014 cited eighteen MIM theory papers from any year. These nine ACI
articles covered mainly the areas of clinical documentation and medication-related
decision support. The methodological basis they cited from was almost exclusively
related to evaluation. We could show some direct links where theory impacted practice.
These links are however few in relation to the total amount of papers published.
Conclusions: Editorial policies such as publishing systematic methodological reviews and clarification
of possible practical impact of theory-focused articles may improve bridging.
Keywords
Biomedical informatics - health informatics - clinical informatics - medical informatics
- serial publications