The Evolving Role of Open Source Software in Medicine and Health Services

The past five decades have witnessed immense coevolution of methods and tools of information technology, and their practical and experimental application within the medical and healthcare domain. Healthcare itself continues to evolve in response to change in healthcare needs, progress in the scienti...

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Main Authors: Sevket Seref Arikan, David Ingram
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Carleton University 2013-01-01
Series:Technology Innovation Management Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://timreview.ca/sites/default/files/article_PDF/IngramArikan_TIMReview_January2013.pdf
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spelling doaj-655fd38cc7a34d23b9d706b961f603692020-11-24T22:15:07ZengCarleton UniversityTechnology Innovation Management Review1927-03212013-01-01January 2013: Open Source Sustainability3239The Evolving Role of Open Source Software in Medicine and Health ServicesSevket Seref ArikanDavid IngramThe past five decades have witnessed immense coevolution of methods and tools of information technology, and their practical and experimental application within the medical and healthcare domain. Healthcare itself continues to evolve in response to change in healthcare needs, progress in the scientific foundations of treatments, and in professional and managerial organization of affordable and effective services, in which patients and their families and carers increasingly participate. Taken together, these trends impose highly complex underlying challenges for the design, development, and sustainability of the quality of supporting information services and software infrastructure that are needed. The challenges are multidisciplinary and multiprofessional in scope, and they require deeper study and learning to inform policy and promote public awareness of the problems health services have faced in this area for many years. The repeating pattern of failure to live up to expectations of policy-driven national health IT initiatives has proved very costly and remains frustrating and unproductive for all involved. In this article, we highlight the barriers to progress and discuss the dangers of pursuing a standardization framework devoid of empirical testing and iterative development. We give the example of the openEHR Foundation, which was established at University College London (UCL) in London, England, with members in 80 countries. The Foundation is a not-for-profit company providing open specifications and working for generic standards for electronic records, informed directly by a wide range of implementation experience. We also introduce the Opereffa open source framework, which was developed at UCL based on these specifications and which has been downloaded in some 70 countries. We argue that such an approach is now essential to support good discipline, innovation, and governance at the heart of medicine and health services, in line with the new mandate for health commissioning in the United Kingdom's National Health Service (NHS), which emphasizes patient participation, innovation, transparency, and accountability. http://timreview.ca/sites/default/files/article_PDF/IngramArikan_TIMReview_January2013.pdfelectronic health care recordinformation retrievalopen source frameworkopenEHR Foundationpersistencestandards based
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sevket Seref Arikan
David Ingram
spellingShingle Sevket Seref Arikan
David Ingram
The Evolving Role of Open Source Software in Medicine and Health Services
Technology Innovation Management Review
electronic health care record
information retrieval
open source framework
openEHR Foundation
persistence
standards based
author_facet Sevket Seref Arikan
David Ingram
author_sort Sevket Seref Arikan
title The Evolving Role of Open Source Software in Medicine and Health Services
title_short The Evolving Role of Open Source Software in Medicine and Health Services
title_full The Evolving Role of Open Source Software in Medicine and Health Services
title_fullStr The Evolving Role of Open Source Software in Medicine and Health Services
title_full_unstemmed The Evolving Role of Open Source Software in Medicine and Health Services
title_sort evolving role of open source software in medicine and health services
publisher Carleton University
series Technology Innovation Management Review
issn 1927-0321
publishDate 2013-01-01
description The past five decades have witnessed immense coevolution of methods and tools of information technology, and their practical and experimental application within the medical and healthcare domain. Healthcare itself continues to evolve in response to change in healthcare needs, progress in the scientific foundations of treatments, and in professional and managerial organization of affordable and effective services, in which patients and their families and carers increasingly participate. Taken together, these trends impose highly complex underlying challenges for the design, development, and sustainability of the quality of supporting information services and software infrastructure that are needed. The challenges are multidisciplinary and multiprofessional in scope, and they require deeper study and learning to inform policy and promote public awareness of the problems health services have faced in this area for many years. The repeating pattern of failure to live up to expectations of policy-driven national health IT initiatives has proved very costly and remains frustrating and unproductive for all involved. In this article, we highlight the barriers to progress and discuss the dangers of pursuing a standardization framework devoid of empirical testing and iterative development. We give the example of the openEHR Foundation, which was established at University College London (UCL) in London, England, with members in 80 countries. The Foundation is a not-for-profit company providing open specifications and working for generic standards for electronic records, informed directly by a wide range of implementation experience. We also introduce the Opereffa open source framework, which was developed at UCL based on these specifications and which has been downloaded in some 70 countries. We argue that such an approach is now essential to support good discipline, innovation, and governance at the heart of medicine and health services, in line with the new mandate for health commissioning in the United Kingdom's National Health Service (NHS), which emphasizes patient participation, innovation, transparency, and accountability.
topic electronic health care record
information retrieval
open source framework
openEHR Foundation
persistence
standards based
url http://timreview.ca/sites/default/files/article_PDF/IngramArikan_TIMReview_January2013.pdf
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