Tuesday 17 January 2012

INFORMATION ARCHITECTURE


We have presented an expanded vision of how the organizational and technical infrastructure of HIOs (Health Information Organizations) could improve the efficiency and quality of public health reporting, facilitate public health investigation, improve emergency response, and enable public health to communicate information to the clinical community. We note that there are significant worries about the financial viability of some HIOs, some notable failures, and much concern about developing business models for HIO sustainability. These issues notwithstanding, there were 193 HIO projects at various stages of development in 48 states, including 42 that were operational at the time of a 2009 survey. In addition, new models for health information exchange are being developed to augment regional health information organization efforts, such as the Nationwide Health Information Network Direct Project (available at: http://nhindirect.org). The use cases described here provide clear advantages to public health, but each use case also provides benefits to clinical participants, whether by easing the burden of mandated reporting and responding to public health investigations, improved clinical decision-making that is based on epidemiologic data, or protecting the ability of the institution to function during public health emergencies.

Although clinical use cases often seem to be the initial motivators of HIOs, public health can and should get involved during the initial phases of development. Having appropriate public health agency representatives at the table early in the process may help influence governance issues and architectural design decisions so that the HIO project can support public health use cases.

Different technological approaches may be required to support public health use cases, depending on the system or network architectures for a given HIO. Examples of the varying architectures include centralized repositories, as in the case of large hospital networks with enterprise-wide electronic health record implementation (e.g., the Veterans Affairs or Kaiser Permanente health systems);  hybrid peer-to-peer file-sharing models, in which all clinical information is stored at the participant organization on edge servers that sit behind their firewalls but with patient demographics stored centrally to allow patient matching and retrieval of relevant clinical information; and patient-controlled health records, in which patients determine which data to deposit into their account and who has permission to view or change them (e.g., Google Health or Microsoft Health Vault). Obtaining the public health benefit envisioned here will require additional capabilities and functionality on the part of HIOsand a thorough understanding of pertinent legal and privacy issues.

Depending on regulations and the particular details of a given HIO implementation, the information relayed in the various use cases may be summarized counts that are fully identified, deidentified or anonymized — so that a patient cannot reasonably be identified individually — , or pseudonymized in instances where patient identifiers are not initially reported but a mechanism exists to allow rei-dentification if necessary (e.g., a clustered outbreak where confirmation and investigation are necessary). Although we have briefly mentioned the likely level of privacy necessary for each use case, the privacy implications of HIE are complex and are discussed in detail elsewhere.
Having a single point of contact on the clinical side for establishing, testing, and maintaining data flows would be invaluable to public health partners. What we have not discussed is the reciprocal need to consider how public health is organized to interface with clinical entities, both within public health agencies and across them. An assessment by the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists notes the limited progress made in integrating electronic disease surveillance systems, with only 13 of 48 states reporting interoperability between any surveillance modules. The Universal Public Health Node being developed in New York state is the latest in a series of attempts to accomplish this integration. The potential for harmonization of clinical reporting through HIE challenges public health officials to develop their own analog to the HIO, with parallel requirements for technology standards, staffing, governance, and trust.
Multiple parallel and discrete efforts are under way to institute electronic reporting from clinical providers to public health, covering such areas as electronic lab reporting, immunization and cancer registries, birth and death registration, adverse events, and syndromic surveillance, to name just a few. Unprecedented national investments in health information technology are poised to dramatically increase the amount of structured electronic data available and stimulate the advancement of multiple models for health information exchange. To maximize the benefits of these investments to public health, new HIE infrastructure must also demonstrate its ability to support these public health use cases, and health jurisdictions must be given the financial resources necessary to fully participate.

INFORMATION SCIENCE



To survive in the modern world we need to achieve a certain level of literacy and acquire information gathering skills. Part of this skill-set is to be able to decide what information is valid as opposed to information that is less reliable (or even complete fiction).

The multitude of sources supplying us all with information these days is vast! From television, radio and printed media right through to the more technologically advanced internet social communities, online news reporting and various other blogs or websites.

The key to information literacy is deciding which source of information is most reliable and having the skills to cross-check facts with various different sources. This skill will continue to improve throughout your life and your information literacy will develop as you learn.

LIBRARY SCIENCE


The American Library Association (ALA) is sponsoring three, new advocacy training programs to help libraries educate their communities about the Internet and related issues, including children’s access, intellectual freedom and the use of filters. The programs are part of ALA President Ann Symons’ intellectual freedom leadership initiatives.
The trainings are available to state and regional library groups to use at workshops and conferences. They are intended for library staff, trustees, Friends organizations, parents, school administrators, community leaders and decision makers.
The purpose of the advocacy trainings is to create a broad umbrella that allows all kinds of libraries the opportunity to design and implement activities to meet their needs. Each training can stand alone or work in conjunction with the other two. Speakers are available.

LIBRARY HISTORY


Early days
The first circulating libraries in the UK were formed during the mid-eighteenth century and allowed books to be borrowed for a specified loan period after payment of a subscription. Several libraries were attached to shops, notably W. H. Smith and Harrods.
The Boots Book Lending service was established in 1898 at the instigation of Florence Boot, initially in the small number of shops which had a stationery department. The early libraries were small and filled with second hand stock. The first Head Librarian was appointed in 1900.

Boots for Booklovers

By 1903, when there were 300 Boots stores across the country, 143 had a Booklovers’ Library, with 6 libraries in London and 8 in Nottingham. Members could take out a book at any one of the library branches and return it to any other. Membership cost from 10/6 a year for one volume up to 42/- for six and 7/- for each additional volume. Alternatively a borrower could take a book for half a crown (2/6) returnable deposit and a penny or two pence a week.
Library catalogues were issued and these stressed the library’s reputation for the circulation of clean books and the beautifully fitted libraries. The libraries were placed on the first floor or at the back of the branch, thus drawing the customer through as many departments as possible on their way. Libraries in the larger stores such as those in Manchester, Glasgow, Edinburgh and Brighton, were fitted with wooden bookshelves, window seats, chairs, tables and sofas and even notepaper and fresh flowers.
Picture taken inside Boots booklovers library
The librarian’s job was to know the book stock and advise readers to ensure that they never left the library dissatisfied or empty-handed. There were a variety of services available. ‘A’ subscribers could leave a booklist for books or suitable alternatives to be reserved for them on their next visit. There were also special ‘On Demand’ subscriptions, holiday and juvenile subscriptions, a postal service, and special arrangements for country members.
Golden Years
The interwar years saw the heyday of the library. By 1920 there were 500,000 subscribers and by 1938 books were being exchanged at the rate of 35 million each year, with light romance and whodunits being the most popular. During the Second World War the number of subscribers increased to a million. Boots were buying books at the rate of 1,250,000 a year, which gave the company considerable influence in the publishing world. Striking modern libraries were designed for stores such as Plymouth and Southampton, which had been destroyed by wartime bombing and rebuilt in the 1950s.
Picture taken inside Boots booklovers library
The Final Chapter
By the 1960s subscription libraries became less popular, possibly because of the lower cost of paperbacks, the growing investment in public libraries and other sources of entertainment. There were also commercial pressures influencing the use of sales space in stores. In 1961 W. H. Smith closed their libraries and Boots took over their subscribers. In 1965 the announcement was made that the Boots Booklovers’ Libraries, now with only 121 branches and 140,000 subscribers, were to close. The last branches closed in February 1966.