14 research outputs found

    The New Knowledge Environment: Quality Initiatives in Health Sciences Libraries

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    Library Trends 42 (2) 1993: Education for Library and Information Management Careers in Corporate Environments

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    High performance computing and communications: FY 1996 implementation plan

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    Contract and Grant Awards Fiscal Year 2000

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    Message from the Vice Provost for Research I invite you to read this report Contract and Grant Awards FY00, which lists contract and grant (C&G) awards received by the University of New Mexico (UNM) during the period from July 1, 1999 - June 30, 2000. These awards represent new funds that were acquired during FY00 by the main campus, branch campuses and education centers and the Health Sciences Center (HSC). The HSC includes the School of Medicine, College of Nursing and College of Pharmacy. The awards received for FY00 total 217.4M,ofwhich217.4M, of which 139.9M is attributed to the main campus. These awards assist in providing resources that are necessary to enhance the quality of research and teaching at UNM, as well as the opportunities for students to be trained in state-of-the-art laboratories in a multitude of disciplines. Please join me in thanking our dedicated faculty, staff and students involved in the sponsored research, public service and instruction efforts at UNM. It is their successful endeavors that enhance UNM\u27s visibility at the national and international levels, as well as contribute to the economic growth of New Mexico and the region. Thanks are also due to a number of individuals who have helped in preparing this report. In particular, I would like to acknowledge the efforts of Denise Wallen, Ann Powell and Valerie Roybal of the Office of Research Services, and Marcia Sletten and Lee Gulbransen of the Health Sciences Center. I welcome your comments and questions with respect to this report, and other issues related to research activities at the University of New Mexico. John K. McIver Interim Vice Provost for Researc

    Background Examples of Literature Searches on Topics of Interest

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    A zip file of various literature searches & some resources related to our work related to exposure after the Chernobyl accident and as we began looking at helping in Semey Kazakhstan----a collection of literature reviews on various topics we were interested in... eg. establishing a registry of those exposed for longterm follow-up, what we knew about certain areas like genetics and some resources like A Guide to Environmental Resources on the Internet by Carol Briggs-Erickson and Toni Murphy which could be found on the Internet and was written to be used by researchers, environmentalists, teachers and any person who is interested in knowing and doing something about the health of our planet. See more at https://archives.library.tmc.edu/dm-ms211-012-0060

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    thesisHealth information systems are networks of computers employed by health care enterprises to facilitate the delivery of their health care product. Computers originally entered the medical domain solely as tools aimed at the business functions of the hospital. Having demonstrated their utility in this area, computers were perceived by certain innovators to have usefulness in the clinical domain. As clinical computer applications were successfully developed and implemented, they have over time been merged together into systems offering multiple areas of functionality directly impacting the clinical aspects of health care delivery. Such health information systems have now assumed major importance in the provision of health care in a complex medical environment. Although the focus of substantial investment for development and implementation, relatively little work has been done to assess the value of such health information systems. The business information technology literature and the medical informatics literature each include only a small number of published reports examining the value question in an incomplete manner. No generally accepted valuation strategy has been developed for information systems in either the business or health care domains. Several valuation methods with potential applicability to health information systems have evolved: cost-effectiveness / cost- benefit analysis, return on investment, information economics, measurement systems, the Strassmann approach, the Japanese approach, and the strategic value approach. None of these valuation strategies is clearly superior; each has different strengths and weaknesses. A matrix comparing these strategies on the bases of explicitness and ease of implementation is proposed. Intermountain Health Care (IHC) has been instrumental in the development of health information systems and a leader in the application of such technology in clinical health care delivery. IHC's HELP system has played a seminal role as a catalyst to the development of the health information system industry. Although both historically and functionally important, detailed financial information regarding HELP'S origins and implementation no longer exists. Current IHC budget information demonstrates the major financial commitment underway within this health care enterprise totaling approximately 157millionoverthelastdecadeandwithadditionalexpendituresof157 million over the last decade and with additional expenditures of 47 to $61 million projected annually through fiscal year 2004. The complex budgetary relationships between HELP and the other health information systems at LDS Hospital further obscure the magnitude of the information technology investment within this institution. Benefits of health information systems are potentially most substantial within the domain of clinical integration. IHC has not implemented any formal valuation strategy for its health information systems, but the ad hoc measurement systems valuation approach applied to date is practical, flexible, and the most appropriate of the available systems. Adequate valuation of health information systems cannot readily be achieved given the existing traditional hierarchical accounting structure; an alternative accounting framework patterned after a relational database is proposed
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