The role of the UMLS in ‘storing’ and ‘sharing’ across systems

We will argue that ‘sharing’, ‘re-use’, ‘re-purposing’, and ‘addition’ of health care information is difficult, intrinsically; that the best way to overcome the difficulty is to start doing it, as soon as possible, and that the UMLS Knowledge Sources provide the best place to start. We recommend tha...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of bio-medical computing 1994, Vol.34 (1), p.207-237
Hauptverfasser: Tuttle, Mark S., Nelson, Stuart J.
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container_title International journal of bio-medical computing
container_volume 34
creator Tuttle, Mark S.
Nelson, Stuart J.
description We will argue that ‘sharing’, ‘re-use’, ‘re-purposing’, and ‘addition’ of health care information is difficult, intrinsically; that the best way to overcome the difficulty is to start doing it, as soon as possible, and that the UMLS Knowledge Sources provide the best place to start. We recommend that the UMLS be used as a default source of biomedical concept names and relationships, as a comprehensive, data-based, ‘reference model’, and as an example of a large, ecumenical, evolving, continuously updated source of re-usable health care information.
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subjects Classification
Computer User Training
Database Management Systems - classification
Database Management Systems - organization & administration
Delivery of Health Care
Expert Systems
Health Personnel
Hospital Information Systems
Humans
Information Storage and Retrieval - classification
Information Systems
Integrated Advanced Information Management Systems - classification
Integrated Advanced Information Management Systems - organization & administration
Medical Record Linkage
Medical Records Systems, Computerized
Problem Solving
Reference model
Semantics
Software
Software Design
Systems Analysis
Unified Medical Language System (UMLS)
Unified Medical Language System - classification
Unified Medical Language System - organization & administration
User-Computer Interface
Vocabulary
title The role of the UMLS in ‘storing’ and ‘sharing’ across systems
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