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Philippine Medical Informatics Society
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  • About the SocietyThe Philippine Medical Informatics Society is an acknowledged proponent of open source development for health. Realizing that public health is for the public good, it maintains that all health applications must be open to peer review and analysis. Among the activities it has offered through its eight years were lectures from international medical informatics experts, seminars on use of online bibliographic databases, handheld devices, electronic health records, and security of electronic health information. The PMIS is a strong partner in the Standards for Health Information in the Philippines project as well as the BuddyWorks Telehealth Project and the upcoming Philippine National Health Information Infrastructure. The Society’s bias is for the deployment of health information systems in support of national development and poverty alleviation through the full implementation of the Primary Healthcare Approach. Among the beneficiaries of its technical seminars are community health workers, government midwives, and private practitioners..
  • President’s Message  Hello colleagues in the Philippine Medical Informatics Society (PMIS), thank you for all your support and trust in me and my capabilities. For a period of two years, I will be serving PMIS as president, and, during this period, I will try my best to make our society more interactive and more conducive for intellectual exchange of ideas and knowledge in health informatics. Medical Informatics is all around us–in our everyday health practice and in our own health promotion, it’s just that most of us miss out on the opportunities to utilize the principles and theories of med info in order to make clinical decisions more precise and accurate. My vision is for PMIS to be pro-active to the changes that are happening around us, we are at the forefront of technology as it shapes and carves the tapestry that would later become the future of medicine. Advances in healthcare is unfolding so fast that most of the methods and techniques taught during our school days 10-20 years ago are getting obsolete and are replaced by more machines and software applications. Handheld device software programs are proving to be of a big help and we are slowly growing more….
  • Health Informatics in the PhilippinesAbstract The progress of biomedical informatics in the Philippines has been fraught with many highs and lows. Called ‘health informatics’ locally, the field has been in informal and formal development for the past ten years since the first professionals commenced investing time and energy to pursue the field as a distinct discipline. Although local efforts have been hampered with infrastructure issues, there have been many activities that have provided strategic foundation for the implementation of future activities. Foremost among these is the Master of Science in Health Informatics offered by the University of the Philippines Manila. The program offers a unique approach to learning health informatics by putting emphasis on community-based and community-managed health information systems that are appropriate for resource constrained environments. It is also unique for its heavy adoption of the principles of primary health care (as manifested by the Declaration of Alma Ata) in its curriculum design and implementation. Introduction As a science, biomedical informatics had been loosely practiced in the Philippines as early as the nineteen eighties. Residents in tertiary care facilities who had access to IBM compatible machines were already using word processors to store patient information. In other areas, anecdotal evidence of database management….
  • Officers and MembersThe Philippine Medical Informatics Society was registered as a non-stock, non-profit organization at the Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission last November 12, 1996 with the following founders:   Alvin B. Marcelo Portia F. Marcelo Daniel A. Dela Paz, Jr. Noel D. LAwas Mario R. Festin Teodoro J. Herbosa Virnaliza C. Gamalinda Aguedo Troy D. Gepte IV Inocencio Daniel C. Maramba Nelson Cabaluna The stated purpose and mission of the society was:   To Promote and Develop the Application of Information Technology in the Field of Medicine and Public Health, in order to Improve the Quality of Healthcare of the Filipino People. The society’s headquarters was at the Dr. Noel Lawas, College of Public Health, University of the Philippines, Manila. Currently, the Chairman of the Board of Trustees is Dr. Alvin B. Marcelo, and the President is Dr. Erwin Brian T. Tan..
  • MembershipThe Philippine Medical Informatics Society was registered as a non-stock, non-profit organization at the Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission last November 12, 1996 with the following founders:   Alvin B. Marcelo Portia F. Marcelo Daniel A. Dela Paz, Jr. Noel D. LAwas Mario R. Festin Teodoro J. Herbosa Virnaliza C. Gamalinda Aguedo Troy D. Gepte IV Inocencio Daniel C. Maramba Nelson Cabaluna The stated purpose and mission of the society was:   To Promote and Develop the Application of Information Technology in the Field of Medicine and Public Health, in order to Improve the Quality of Healthcare of the Filipino People. The society’s headquarters was at the Dr. Noel Lawas, College of Public Health, University of the Philippines, Manila. Currently, the Chairman of the Board of Trustees is Dr. Alvin B. Marcelo, and the President is Dr. Erwin Brian T. Tan..
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Research Study

Supervised Machine Learning Algorithms Can Classify Open-Text Feedback of Doctor Performance With Human-Level Accuracy
21 Mar 2017

Supervised Machine Learning Algorithms Can Classify Open-Text Feedback of Doctor Performance With Human-Level Accuracy

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Ecological Momentary Assessment in Behavioral Research: Addressing Technological and Human Participant Challenges
21 Mar 2017

Ecological Momentary Assessment in Behavioral Research: Addressing Technological and Human Participant Challenges

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Impact of Social Processes in Online Health Communities on Patient Empowerment in Relationship With the Physician: Emergence of Functional and Dysfunctional Empowerment
21 Mar 2017

Impact of Social Processes in Online Health Communities on Patient Empowerment in Relationship With the Physician: Emergence of Functional and Dysfunctional Empowerment

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Outcomes in Child Health: Exploring the Use of Social Media to Engage Parents in Patient-Centered Outcomes Research
21 Mar 2017

Outcomes in Child Health: Exploring the Use of Social Media to Engage Parents in Patient-Centered Outcomes Research

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Microsoft Kinect-based Continuous Performance Test: An Objective Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Assessment
21 Mar 2017

Microsoft Kinect-based Continuous Performance Test: An Objective Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Assessment

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Comparison of Different Recruitment Methods for Sexual and Reproductive Health Research: Social Media–Based Versus Conventional Methods
21 Mar 2017

Comparison of Different Recruitment Methods for Sexual and Reproductive Health Research: Social Media–Based Versus Conventional Methods

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Behavioral Indicators on a Mobile Sensing Platform Predict Clinically Validated Psychiatric Symptoms of Mood and Anxiety Disorders
21 Mar 2017

Behavioral Indicators on a Mobile Sensing Platform Predict Clinically Validated Psychiatric Symptoms of Mood and Anxiety Disorders

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Use of GetCheckedOnline, a Comprehensive Web-based Testing Service for Sexually Transmitted and Blood-Borne Infections
21 Mar 2017

Use of GetCheckedOnline, a Comprehensive Web-based Testing Service for Sexually Transmitted and Blood-Borne Infections

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Website Use and Effects of Online Information About Tobacco Additives Among the Dutch General Population: A Randomized Controlled Trial
21 Mar 2017

Website Use and Effects of Online Information About Tobacco Additives Among the Dutch General Population: A Randomized Controlled Trial

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Longitudinal Changes in Psychological States in Online Health Community Members: Understanding the Long-Term Effects of Participating in an Online Depression Community
21 Mar 2017

Longitudinal Changes in Psychological States in Online Health Community Members: Understanding the Long-Term Effects of Participating in an Online Depression Community

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Posts pagination

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Recent Additions

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  • A Qualitative Analysis of How Online Access to Mental Health Notes Is Changing Clinician Perceptions of Power and the Therapeutic Relationship
  • Effectiveness of a Web-Based Intervention in Reducing Depression and Sickness Absence: Randomized Controlled Trial
  • Scaling Up Psychological Treatments: A Countrywide Test of the Online Training of Therapists

Recommended Sites

  • American Medical Informatics Association
  • IMIA – International Medical Informatics Association
  • Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association
  • UP Manila National Telehealth Center

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Mission of the PMIS

To promote and develop the application of information technology in the field of medicine and public health, in order to improve the quality of health care of the Filipino people.
  • Home.
  • About the SocietyThe Philippine Medical Informatics Society is an acknowledged proponent of open source development for health. Realizing that public health is for the public good, it maintains that all health applications must be open to peer review and analysis. Among the activities it has offered through its eight years were lectures from international medical informatics experts, seminars on use of online bibliographic databases, handheld devices, electronic health records, and security of electronic health information. The PMIS is a strong partner in the Standards for Health Information in the Philippines project as well as the BuddyWorks Telehealth Project and the upcoming Philippine National Health Information Infrastructure. The Society’s bias is for the deployment of health information systems in support of national development and poverty alleviation through the full implementation of the Primary Healthcare Approach. Among the beneficiaries of its technical seminars are community health workers, government midwives, and private practitioners..
  • President’s Message  Hello colleagues in the Philippine Medical Informatics Society (PMIS), thank you for all your support and trust in me and my capabilities. For a period of two years, I will be serving PMIS as president, and, during this period, I will try my best to make our society more interactive and more conducive for intellectual exchange of ideas and knowledge in health informatics. Medical Informatics is all around us–in our everyday health practice and in our own health promotion, it’s just that most of us miss out on the opportunities to utilize the principles and theories of med info in order to make clinical decisions more precise and accurate. My vision is for PMIS to be pro-active to the changes that are happening around us, we are at the forefront of technology as it shapes and carves the tapestry that would later become the future of medicine. Advances in healthcare is unfolding so fast that most of the methods and techniques taught during our school days 10-20 years ago are getting obsolete and are replaced by more machines and software applications. Handheld device software programs are proving to be of a big help and we are slowly growing more….
  • Health Informatics in the PhilippinesAbstract The progress of biomedical informatics in the Philippines has been fraught with many highs and lows. Called ‘health informatics’ locally, the field has been in informal and formal development for the past ten years since the first professionals commenced investing time and energy to pursue the field as a distinct discipline. Although local efforts have been hampered with infrastructure issues, there have been many activities that have provided strategic foundation for the implementation of future activities. Foremost among these is the Master of Science in Health Informatics offered by the University of the Philippines Manila. The program offers a unique approach to learning health informatics by putting emphasis on community-based and community-managed health information systems that are appropriate for resource constrained environments. It is also unique for its heavy adoption of the principles of primary health care (as manifested by the Declaration of Alma Ata) in its curriculum design and implementation. Introduction As a science, biomedical informatics had been loosely practiced in the Philippines as early as the nineteen eighties. Residents in tertiary care facilities who had access to IBM compatible machines were already using word processors to store patient information. In other areas, anecdotal evidence of database management….
  • Officers and MembersThe Philippine Medical Informatics Society was registered as a non-stock, non-profit organization at the Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission last November 12, 1996 with the following founders:   Alvin B. Marcelo Portia F. Marcelo Daniel A. Dela Paz, Jr. Noel D. LAwas Mario R. Festin Teodoro J. Herbosa Virnaliza C. Gamalinda Aguedo Troy D. Gepte IV Inocencio Daniel C. Maramba Nelson Cabaluna The stated purpose and mission of the society was:   To Promote and Develop the Application of Information Technology in the Field of Medicine and Public Health, in order to Improve the Quality of Healthcare of the Filipino People. The society’s headquarters was at the Dr. Noel Lawas, College of Public Health, University of the Philippines, Manila. Currently, the Chairman of the Board of Trustees is Dr. Alvin B. Marcelo, and the President is Dr. Erwin Brian T. Tan..
  • MembershipThe Philippine Medical Informatics Society was registered as a non-stock, non-profit organization at the Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission last November 12, 1996 with the following founders:   Alvin B. Marcelo Portia F. Marcelo Daniel A. Dela Paz, Jr. Noel D. LAwas Mario R. Festin Teodoro J. Herbosa Virnaliza C. Gamalinda Aguedo Troy D. Gepte IV Inocencio Daniel C. Maramba Nelson Cabaluna The stated purpose and mission of the society was:   To Promote and Develop the Application of Information Technology in the Field of Medicine and Public Health, in order to Improve the Quality of Healthcare of the Filipino People. The society’s headquarters was at the Dr. Noel Lawas, College of Public Health, University of the Philippines, Manila. Currently, the Chairman of the Board of Trustees is Dr. Alvin B. Marcelo, and the President is Dr. Erwin Brian T. Tan..
    • Membership Benefits
    • Membership Categories
    • Membership Application Form
  • Contact Us.

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