Open Access
Yearb Med Inform 2012; 21(01): 126-129
DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1639442
Synopsis
Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart

Knowledge Representation and Management: Towards Patient Health Self-management

A.-M. Rassinoux
1   Information Systems Division, Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland
,
Section Editor for the IMIA Yearbook Section on Knowledge Representation and Management› Author Affiliations

I greatly acknowledge the support of Martina Hutter and of the reviewers in the selection process of the IMIA Yearbook.
Further Information

Correspondence to:

Anne-Marie Rassinoux, Ph. D.
University Hospitals of Geneva
Information Systems Division
4, Rue Gabrielle-Perret-Gentil
CH-1211 Geneva 14
Switzerland
Phone: +41 22 372 6293   
Fax: +41 22 372 8680   

Publication History

Publication Date:
10 March 2018 (online)

 

Summary

Objectives

To summarize excellent current research in the field of knowledge representation and management (KRM).

Method

A synopsis of the articles selected for the IMIA Yearbook 2012 is provided and an attempt to highlight the current trends in the field of health management is sketched.

Results

Among the five selected papers, two confirm the benefit of exploiting open-source language toolkits for the automatic extraction of medical concepts, assertions and/or relationships from clinical texts. One paper aims at exploiting domain-specific terminologies to improve the parsing of biomedical noun phrases, and another one aims at discovering rare diseases associations embedded into disparate textual sources. Finally, the last paper describes a collaborative search approach integrated into a homegrown EHR search engine.

Conclusions

This selected set of papers confirms that natural language processing, as well as knowledge extraction, discovering and retrieval, are still active and fruitful research fields. Although these papers are not directly focusing on personal health informatics applications„ important features are highlighted and tailored to fit the requirements of patient health self-management. Delivering timely, friendly and secure access to functional, accurate, up-to-date and sustainable personal health records is a significant challenging task for supporting self-managed healthcare.


 



Correspondence to:

Anne-Marie Rassinoux, Ph. D.
University Hospitals of Geneva
Information Systems Division
4, Rue Gabrielle-Perret-Gentil
CH-1211 Geneva 14
Switzerland
Phone: +41 22 372 6293   
Fax: +41 22 372 8680