Abstract
The use of computer technology in medicine is no longer the domain of only a few “gadget” happy high-tech aficionados. The rapid pace of medical progress and the increasing demands on physicians' time mandate that mechanisms be developed to deliver the tools of contemporary information management directly into the hands ofall practicing physicians. It is with this intent that the Council on Long-range Planning and Development and the Council on Scientific Affairs of the American Medical Association have developed an informational report on Medical Informatics.
The technology for producing information about medicine and patients is well into the information age. However, the technology for managing this information has not kept up, at least to the extent of being available in medical facilities where it is needed. Most users of medical information, physicians included, have not crossed the threshold into the electronic/computer era of information acquisition, distribution, and assimilation. The continuing development of the physician as computer user will create a more efficient work environment for the physician while at the same time improving patient care.
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From the Division of Biomedical Science, American Medical Association Council on Scientific Affairs and the Council on Long Range Planning and Development, 515 N. State St. Chicago, Illinois 60610.
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Council on Scientific Affairs and Council on Long Range Planning and Development of the American Medical Association. Medical informatics: An emerging medical discipline. J Med Syst 14, 161–179 (1990). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00999265
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00999265