In collaboration with AMIA's Nursing Informatics Working Group and the Alliance for Nursing Informatics, the AMIA COVID-19 Webinar Series continues with a presentation highlighting the contributions of nursing informatics.
The lack of a national or global unified response to the COVID-19 pandemic presents health care professionals with the greatest challenge of their careers. As informaticians create systematic responses to a host of issues – eg, creating terminologies, tracking and predicting outbreaks, ensuring practitioners’ personal safety, establishing telemedicine systems, and using AI to develop new diagnostics and treatments – it is critical to exchange information in real time to determine best practices in uncharted territory. During this webinar, nurse informaticians share information about how they are “building the airplane while flying” and using nursing informatics to respond to this global crisis. This webinar does not offer nursing contact hours.
Watch the Recording
Speaker Information
Maxim (Max) Topaz, PhD, RN, MA
Elizabeth Standish Gill Associate Professor of Nursing
Columbia University Medical Center
Columbia University Data Science Institute
Visiting Nurse Service of New York
Harvard Medical School & Brigham and Women's Hospital
Gregory Alexander, PhD, RN, FAAN
Professor, Columbia University School of Nursing, New York
Member, National Advisory Council, AHRQ
Susan C. Hull, MSN, RN-BC, NEA-BC, FAMIA
Chief Health Information Officer
CareLoop, Inc
Chair of the Governing Board of Directors for the Alliance for Nursing Informatics (ANI)
Karen Dunn Lopez, PhD, MPH, RN
Associate Professor, Director of Research, Center for Nursing Classification and Clinical Effectiveness
The University of Iowa College of Nursing
Kenrick Cato, PhD, RN, CPHIMS
Assistant Professor of Nursing
Columbia University School of Nursing
Karen A. Monsen, PhD, RN, FAMIA, FAAN
Professor | School of Nursing
Director | Center for Nursing Informatics
Director | Omaha System Partnership
University of Minnesota
Michael Wang, RN, MBA
Founder and CEO
Inspiren
Target Audience
Nurses with expertise and/or interest in nursing informatics
Statement of Purpose
The lack of a national or global unified response to the COVID-19 pandemic presents nurses and health care professionals with the greatest challenge of their careers. As nurse informaticians create systematic responses to a host of issues – e.g., creating/adapting terminologies, tracking symptoms and predicting outbreaks, ensuring practitioners’ personal safety, establishing virtual care systems, and using AI to develop new models for care interventions – it is critical to exchange information in real time to determine best practices in uncharted territory. During this webinar, nurse informaticians, in clinical practice, education, research and policy will share information about how they are “building the airplane while flying” and using nursing informatics to respond to this global crisis.
This webinar does not offer nursing contact hours.
Learning Objective
After participating in this live activity, the viewer should be better able to:
- Consider nursing informatics approaches across the country to the COVID-19 pandemic with the potential for application to one’s practice setting
About the Series
AMIA's COVID-19 Webinar Series highlights how the informatics community is addressing this global pandemic from all angles. From front-line informaticians and public health informaticists, to clinical and bioinformatics researchers, AMIA's members are uniquely positioned to leverage data and evidence in the fight against COVID-19.
We will look at the pandemic through a health informatics lens and is designed to share informatics responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. Panelists will share their specific domain expertise, including clinical informatics, public health informatics, translational bioinformatics, clinical research informatics, and consumer health informatics. We will also have special emphasis webinars covering topics related to global health, telemedicine, and public policy during the COVID-19 pandemic.