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Towards evidence-based, GIS-driven national spatial health information infrastructure and surveillance services in the United Kingdom

The term "Geographic Information Systems" (GIS) has been added to MeSH in 2003, a step reflecting the importance and growing use of GIS in health and healthcare research and practices. GIS have much more to offer than the obvious digital cartography (map) functions. From a community health...

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Autor principal: Boulos, Maged N Kamel
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2004
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC343292/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14748927
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-072X-3-1
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author Boulos, Maged N Kamel
author_facet Boulos, Maged N Kamel
author_sort Boulos, Maged N Kamel
collection PubMed
description The term "Geographic Information Systems" (GIS) has been added to MeSH in 2003, a step reflecting the importance and growing use of GIS in health and healthcare research and practices. GIS have much more to offer than the obvious digital cartography (map) functions. From a community health perspective, GIS could potentially act as powerful evidence-based practice tools for early problem detection and solving. When properly used, GIS can: inform and educate (professionals and the public); empower decision-making at all levels; help in planning and tweaking clinically and cost-effective actions, in predicting outcomes before making any financial commitments and ascribing priorities in a climate of finite resources; change practices; and continually monitor and analyse changes, as well as sentinel events. Yet despite all these potentials for GIS, they remain under-utilised in the UK National Health Service (NHS). This paper has the following objectives: (1) to illustrate with practical, real-world scenarios and examples from the literature the different GIS methods and uses to improve community health and healthcare practices, e.g., for improving hospital bed availability, in community health and bioterrorism surveillance services, and in the latest SARS outbreak; (2) to discuss challenges and problems currently hindering the wide-scale adoption of GIS across the NHS; and (3) to identify the most important requirements and ingredients for addressing these challenges, and realising GIS potential within the NHS, guided by related initiatives worldwide. The ultimate goal is to illuminate the road towards implementing a comprehensive national, multi-agency spatio-temporal health information infrastructure functioning proactively in real time. The concepts and principles presented in this paper can be also applied in other countries, and on regional (e.g., European Union) and global levels.
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spelling pubmed-3432922004-02-21 Towards evidence-based, GIS-driven national spatial health information infrastructure and surveillance services in the United Kingdom Boulos, Maged N Kamel Int J Health Geogr Review The term "Geographic Information Systems" (GIS) has been added to MeSH in 2003, a step reflecting the importance and growing use of GIS in health and healthcare research and practices. GIS have much more to offer than the obvious digital cartography (map) functions. From a community health perspective, GIS could potentially act as powerful evidence-based practice tools for early problem detection and solving. When properly used, GIS can: inform and educate (professionals and the public); empower decision-making at all levels; help in planning and tweaking clinically and cost-effective actions, in predicting outcomes before making any financial commitments and ascribing priorities in a climate of finite resources; change practices; and continually monitor and analyse changes, as well as sentinel events. Yet despite all these potentials for GIS, they remain under-utilised in the UK National Health Service (NHS). This paper has the following objectives: (1) to illustrate with practical, real-world scenarios and examples from the literature the different GIS methods and uses to improve community health and healthcare practices, e.g., for improving hospital bed availability, in community health and bioterrorism surveillance services, and in the latest SARS outbreak; (2) to discuss challenges and problems currently hindering the wide-scale adoption of GIS across the NHS; and (3) to identify the most important requirements and ingredients for addressing these challenges, and realising GIS potential within the NHS, guided by related initiatives worldwide. The ultimate goal is to illuminate the road towards implementing a comprehensive national, multi-agency spatio-temporal health information infrastructure functioning proactively in real time. The concepts and principles presented in this paper can be also applied in other countries, and on regional (e.g., European Union) and global levels. BioMed Central 2004-01-28 /pmc/articles/PMC343292/ /pubmed/14748927 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-072X-3-1 Text en Copyright © 2004 Boulos; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article: verbatim copying and redistribution of this article are permitted in all media for any purpose, provided this notice is preserved along with the article's original URL.
spellingShingle Review
Boulos, Maged N Kamel
Towards evidence-based, GIS-driven national spatial health information infrastructure and surveillance services in the United Kingdom
title Towards evidence-based, GIS-driven national spatial health information infrastructure and surveillance services in the United Kingdom
title_full Towards evidence-based, GIS-driven national spatial health information infrastructure and surveillance services in the United Kingdom
title_fullStr Towards evidence-based, GIS-driven national spatial health information infrastructure and surveillance services in the United Kingdom
title_full_unstemmed Towards evidence-based, GIS-driven national spatial health information infrastructure and surveillance services in the United Kingdom
title_short Towards evidence-based, GIS-driven national spatial health information infrastructure and surveillance services in the United Kingdom
title_sort towards evidence-based, gis-driven national spatial health information infrastructure and surveillance services in the united kingdom
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC343292/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14748927
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-072X-3-1
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