WEBINAR Thu Sep 17 - Clinical data in FHIR RDF: Intro and Representation, Josh Mandel and David Booth - Part 4 of Yosemite Series

WEBINAR: Clinical data in FHIR RDF: Intro and Representation, Josh 
Mandel and David Booth - Part 4 of Yosemite Series
DATE: Thursday September 17, 2015
TIME: 2 PM Eastern / 11 AM Pacific
ATTEND LIVE - Google Hangouts On Air: https://goo.gl/eY7BkA
DOWNLOAD CALENDAR INVITE: http://goo.gl/xF1rGb

ABSTRACT
FHIR -- Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources -- is a next 
generation standards framework created by HL7.  It is designed to 
improve the interoperability of healthcare data, and will allow 
implementers to choose between equivalent XML, JSON and RDF data 
formats.  This webinar provides an introduction to FHIR and the RDF 
representation of FHIR that is being developed to allow data from other 
standards to be more readily combined and interlinked.

ABOUT THE SPEAKERS
Josh Mandel, MD, is a physician and software engineer at Children's 
Hospital Informatics Program at Harvard-MIT interested in improving 
clinical care through information technology. After earning an S.B. in 
computer science and electrical engineering from the Massachusetts 
Institute of Technology and an M.D. from the Tufts University School of 
Medicine, he joined the faculty of the Boston Children's Hospital 
Informatics Program and Harvard Medical School, where he serves as lead 
architect of the SMART Project (http://smartplatforms.org). Josh has a 
special interest in tools and interfaces that support software 
developers who are new to the health domain.

David Booth, PhD, is a senior software architect at Hawaii Resource 
Group and at Rancho BioSciences, using Semantic Web technology to make 
clinical healthcare data interoperable between diverse systems. He 
previously worked at KnowMED, using Semantic Web technology for 
healthcare quality-of-care and clinical outcomes measurement, and at 
PanGenX, applying Semantic Web technology to genomics in support of 
personalized medicine. Before that he worked on Cleveland Clinic's 
SemanticDB project, which uses RDF and other semantic technologies to 
perform cardiovascular research. Prior to that was a software architect 
at HP Software. He was also a W3C Fellow from 2002 to 2005, where he 
worked on Web Services standards before becoming involved in Semantic 
Web technology. He holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science from UCLA.

Other webinars in the Yosemite Project series will be forthcoming.  If 
you wish to receive announcements of them, join the Yosemite Project 
announcements list: http://groups.google.com/group/YosemiteProject/subscribe

Sincerely,
David Booth, PhD
http://YosemiteProject.org/

Received on Tuesday, 8 September 2015 18:41:10 UTC