No momento em que estamos estruturando o nosso programa de educação profissional e certificação na SBIS, o proTICS, batalhando totalmente com recursos próprios da Sociedade, vemos um anúncio desse sobre a força que o governo americano está dando para uma área hoje considerada super-vital para a competitividade e o progresso da saúde americana.
E o Brasil?
Sabbatini
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Resumo: A Bblioteca Nacional de Medicina, parte dos             Institutos Nacionais de Saúde dos EUA anunciou hoje uma             série de auxilios para programas pesquisa em treinamento e             educação em informática em saúde para 14 universidades, no             valor total de 67 milhões de dólares, o maior programa do             gênero e da história. As universidades selecionadas serão             contempladas por um apoio financeiro durante 5 anos, e             deverão se dedicar a áreas como informática clinica,             bioinformática translacional, informática em pesquisa             clínica e informática em saúde pública.
             Fonte: http://www.nlm.nih.gov/news/informatics_grants_awarded.html
             Resumo por: Renato M.E. Sabbatini
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             National Library of Medicine Awards $67 Million for             Informatics Research Training
             Donald A.B. Lindberg, MD, Director of the National Library             of Medicine (NLM), a part of the National Institutes of             Health (NIH), today announced that the NLM is awarding 14             five-year grants, totaling more than $67 million, for             research training in biomedical informatics, the discipline             that seeks to apply computer and communications technology             to improve health.
             
             For more than 35 years, NLM has been the primary sponsor of             biomedical informatics research training in the United             States.
             
             "NLM's informatics training programs produce investigators             trained in applying biomedical computing to improve clinical             medicine, basic biomedical research, clinical and             translational research, public health, and other             health-related areas," said Dr. Lindberg. "In this era of             the 1,000 Genomes Project, regional health data             repositories, virtual clinical trials and real-time tracking             of disease outbreaks, the need for trained scientists who             understand the complex health information landscape and can             render it more tractable is greater than ever."
             
             At its current set of informatics training programs, NLM             supports more than 200 pre-doctoral and post-doctoral             trainees each year. Biomedical informatics requires             knowledge of biology and medicine as well as of computer and             information sciences, engineering, quantitative sciences and             human behavior. Because informatics is interdisciplinary,             some NLM trainees have mentors from two or more fields             guiding their research. Trainees come to these programs with             a range of educational and professional backgrounds; the             group includes physicians, nurses, biologists, computer             scientists, librarians, statisticians and engineers. "Many             of today's informatics leaders in the public and private             sectors received their graduate or post-graduate informatics             training at one of NLM's training programs" noted Valerie             Florance, PhD., NLM's Associate Director for Extramural             Programs.
             
             Distributed geographically around the country, NLM's             informatics training programs provide graduate degrees and             in-depth research experience in one or more of following             areas:
             
           
- Health care/clinical informatics: Applications of informatics principles and methods to direct patient care, such as advanced clinical decision support systems and multimedia electronic health records; design and provision of informational support to health care consumers.
 - Translational bioinformatics: Applications of informatics principles and methods to support 'bench to bedside to practice' translational research, such as genome-phenome relationships, pharmacogenomics, or personalized medicine; health effects of environmental factors, genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and other similar areas.
 - Clinical research informatics: Applications of informatics principles and methods to support basic clinical trials and comparative effectiveness research; biostatistics; in-silico clinical research trials; merging and mining large disparate data sets that mix images, text and data.
 - Public health informatics: Applications of informatics principles and methods to build integrated resources for health services research, for decision support in public health agencies, to support regional or global health research, or syndromic surveillance; health literacy, health effects of climate change.
 
- Columbia University Health Sciences, New York NY
 - Harvard University Medical School, Boston MA
 - Ohio State University, Columbus OH
 - Oregon Health and Science University, Portland OR
 - Rice University, Houston TX
 - Stanford University, Stanford CA
 - University of California - San Diego, San Diego CA
 - University of Colorado - Denver, Aurora CO
 - University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA
 - University of Utah, Salt Lake City UT
 - University of Washington, Seattle WA
 - University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison WI
 - Vanderbilt University, Nashville TN
 - Yale University, New Haven, CT
 
The National Library of Medicine (NLM) is the world's largest library of the health sciences and collects, organizes and makes available biomedical science information to scientists, health professionals and the public. It celebrated its 175th anniversary in 2011. For more information, visit the Web site at http://www.nlm.nih.gov.
About the National Institutes of Health (NIH): NIH, the nation's medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit www.nih.gov .
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Editor responsãvel: Prof.Dr. Renato M.E. Sabbatini
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