osu department of biomedical informatics overview (march, 2015)

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Department of Biomedical Informatics: A Strategy for 2015 and Beyond Philip R.O. Payne, PhD, FACMI Professor and Chair, College of Medicine, Department of Biomedical Informatics Professor, College of Public Health, Division of Health Services Management and Policy Director, Office of Academic Affairs, Discovery Themes Initiative, Data Analytics Collaborative

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Page 1: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Department of Biomedical Informatics: A Strategy for 2015 and Beyond

Philip R.O. Payne, PhD, FACMI

Professor and Chair, College of Medicine, Department of Biomedical InformaticsProfessor, College of Public Health, Division of Health Services Management and Policy

Director, Office of Academic Affairs, Discovery Themes Initiative, Data Analytics Collaborative

Page 2: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Outline

1) The Strategy Canvas and Blue Ocean Strategy

2) Current “state of play”

OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics

Competitive landscape

3) Priorities for defining a new competitive landscape

Evolved mission and vision

Programmatic objectives

Unique competencies to emphasize

Page 3: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Defining a Strategy Canvas

The strategy canvas is both a diagnostic and an action framework for building a compelling blue ocean strategy

The strategy canvas serves two purposes:

To capture the current state of play in the known market space, which allows users to clearly see the factors that the industry competes on and where the competition currently invests and

To propel users to action by reorienting focus from competitors to alternatives and from customers to noncustomers of the industry

Source: http://www.blueoceanstrategy.com/

Page 4: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

The Strategy Canvas as Part of a Blue Ocean Strategy: Creating New “Markets”

Source: http://www.blueoceanstrategy.com/

Existing BMI

Strategy:

• CRI

• TBI

• HPC

• Knowledge

Engineering

• Human

Factors

What is our next

set of strategic

focus areas?

Page 5: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Top 10 Accomplishments of BMI (2010-14)

1) The recruitment of fifteen new faculty members;

2) The establishment of strategic partnerships with five departments/divisions within the College of Medicine, as well as with the Colleges of Engineering and Public Health;

3) The creation of multiple new masters and doctoral level training programs, including a first-of-its-kind masters level curriculum offered jointly by BMI and the College of Public Health;

4) The successful pursuit and receipt of an NLM T15 training grant for Biomedical Informatics, establishing BMI as one of only 14 NLM-designated informatics training programs at the national level;

5) Receipt of $4.38m in new extramural sponsored project awards.

6) The launch of a departmental grand rounds speaker series, featuring international-level leaders in the field of Biomedical Informatics;

7) The integration and streamlining of department supported consultative units, including bioinformatics, clinical research informatics, and biostatistics consulting units, as well as the launch of a new Research IT services group, under the leadership of the newly created position of Chief Research Information Officer (held by Dr. Peter Embi, Vice-chair of BMI), as well as the initiation of novel analytics projects spanning BMI and the OSU Health System;

8) The relocation of the department to purpose-built space in Lincoln Tower;

9) The active pursuit of a robust technology transfer and commercialization (TCO) agenda, which has already resulted in the early-stage development of three OSU spin-off companies, including the largest software licensing agreement in the history of the university (Signet Accel LLC); and

10) Launch of recruitment and programmatic development efforts as part of the campus-wide Discovery Themes Initiative and Data Analytics Collaborative (led by Dr. Philip Payne)

Page 6: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

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Philip R.O. Payne, PhD

Chair

Shared Services Bioinformatics

Center for Biostatistics

Research Informatics

Research IT

Software Engineering

Department Administration

Peter J. Embi, MD, MS*

Vice-Chair of Operations and

Research, CRIO, and Director,

Division of Clinical and Translational

Informatics

Umit V. Çatalyürek, PhD*

Vice-Chair of Academic Affairs ,

Director, Division of Data

Sciences

Academic Programs• Department Seminar Series

• Distance Learning Initiatives

• Doctoral Programs

• Grand Rounds Series

• Masters Programs

Faculty Affairs Appointments, Promotion &

Tenure

Faculty Mentorship Program

Department Leadership

Page 7: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Department Faculty

* Jointly appointed faculty

Kevin Coombes, PhD

Kun Huang, PhD David Liebner, MD*

James Chen, MD*

Philip R.O. Payne, PhD

Chair

Peter J. Embi, MD, MS*

Vice-Chair of Operations and Research, CRIO, and

Director, Division of Clinical and Translational Informatics

Jeff D. Parvin, MD, PhD

Director, Division of Bioinformatics

and Computational Biology

Umit V. Çatalyürek, PhD*

Vice-Chair of Academic Affairs and Director, Division of

Data Sciences

Clinical and Translational Informatics Data Sciences

Soledad Fernández,

PhD

Erinn Hade, PhD

Alan Ritter, PhD* Lai Wei, PhDAlbert Lai, PhD

Tim Huerta,

PhD, MS*

Po-Yin Yen, RN, PhDKim Powell, PhD

Courtney Hebert,

MD, MS*Bobbie Kite,

PhD, MHS

Don Rucker, MD*

Bioinformatics

Lianbo Yu, PhD

Yuejie Chi, PhD* Lori Dalton, PhD*Metin Gurcan, PhD

Page 8: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Scholarly Foci on 2014

An analysis of text included in the title/abstract of literature indexed in

PubMed and affiliate with OSU BMI, Calendar Year 2014-15

Page 9: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Training Programs

Education and Training Related Opportunities

Undergraduate Degree in Data

Analytics

Research rotations or private studies with

BMI faculty

Targeted coursework in Biomedical Informatics

Online course: AMIA 10x10 Program in Clinical Research

Informatics

Graduate/Post-Graduate Education

Clinical Informatics Fellowship Program

Under Development

Graduate Minor in Biomedical Informatics

Under Development

Graduate School Certified Certificate

Program

Under Development

Core Curriculum

MS or MPH in BMI

(Clinical Informatics and Public Health Informatics)

Clinical Informatics and Public Health

Informatics PhD

Under Development

Biomedical Sciences PhD

(Bioinformatics)

Post-doctoral Training

NLM T15 + Institutional Support

Page 10: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Integrated Consultative Units

Entry Portal: CoRR

Bioinformatics Research

InformaticsResearch IT Biostatistics

Software Engineering

Common Platforms/Processes: CoRR (Project Intake and Tracking), Project

Triage, Standard Chargeback Rates, Computational Infrastructure, Matrix HR

Director: G. Ozer Director: J. Yoder Director: S. Fernandez Director: O. LeleDirector: J. Harper

Page 11: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Competitive Landscape

Large number of emerging centers and institutes focusing on dimensions of Biomedical Informatics:

Intense competition relative to faculty and trainee talent acquisition

Challenging NIH funding climate

Increasing pressures relative to:

The realization of a true Learning Healthcare System

Delivering on the promise of Precision Medicine

Coping with the rise of “Big Data”

Substantial workforce demand

11

Page 12: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

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Page 13: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

A Challenging NIH Funding Climate

https://www.americanprogress.org/issues/economy/report/2014/03/25/86369/erosion-of-

funding-for-the-national-institutes-of-health-threatens-u-s-leadership-in-biomedical-research/

Page 14: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Creating a True Learning Healthcare System

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Greene SM, Reid RJ, Larson EB. Implementing the Learning Health System: From Concept to Action. Ann Intern Med.

2012;157:207-210. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-157-3-201208070-00012

Page 15: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Delivering on the Promise of Precision Medicine

15

Page 16: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Coping With the Rise of “Big Data”

16http://www.ibmbigdatahub.com

Page 17: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Demand for an Applied Informatics Workforce

http://www.usnews.com/education/best-graduate-schools/articles/2014/03/26/consider-pursuing-a-career-in-health-informatics

Page 18: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Updated Mission & Vision Statements

Mission: To improve people’s lives

through innovation in research,

education, and patient care.

Vision: To serve as leaders in the

discovery and application of

innovative biomedical informatics

solutions that address critical needs

related to clinical transformation,

data analytics, and translational

research.

Page 19: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Programmatic Objectives for 2015-17 (1)

1) The expansion for core-faculty ranks to reach a complement of 25-30 individuals, with an emphasis on expertise and capabilities in the areas of: bioinformatics/computational biology; clinical informatics, and data science/analytics;

2) Full instantiation of a divisional structure and corresponding leadership positions and administrative processes, including the following areas: bioinformatics/computational biology; clinical/translational informatics, and data science;

3) The creation of new workforce development and educational programs, including a hybrid on-line and in-person certificate program, as well as a clinical informatics PhD (ideally working in coordination with existing training programs), and a clinical informatics fellowship program;

4) The realization of the vision for a comprehensive and integrated Informatics and Data Science Service Group (including bioinformatics, clinical research informatics, and analytics capabilities);

Page 20: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Programmatic Objectives for 2015-17 (2)

5) The complete physical integration of the Center for Biostatistics into the Lincoln Tower space;

6) Increase collaboration between BMI faculty, the Center for Biostatistics, and the Department’s Consultative Units in order to improve the quality of our research, training, and service activities;

7) The establishment and tracking of a comprehensive faculty performance management and incentive program, including the promotion, pursuit, and recognition of “stretch goals” related to expanding the extramural funding portfolio, publication productivity, and TCO activities of the Department;

8) The “pivoting” of the existing software engineering oriented “Informatics Research and Development” (IR&D) unit to focus on Health System relevant advanced data analytics projects, supported in part by a novel business model in which each such project (as sponsored by the Health System leadership) would include a mechanism by which BMI would benefit from a percentile share of either increased revenue or the valuation of avoided costs (depending on context); and

9) Design and execution of a comprehensive outreach, engagement, and marketing/communication plan so as to increased internal and external awareness and understanding of BMI.

Page 21: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Priority Areas for Scholarship

1) Translational Bioinformatics

2) Knowledge Engineering

3) Evidence Generating Medicine

Situated in the Learning Healthcare System

4) Predictive Analytics

5) Applied Clinical Informatics

6) Workforce Development

Making Sense of High-

Throughput Data

Delivering Knowledge-

Based Healthcare

Informatics as an

Intervention

Training The Future

Health and Biomedical

Workforce

Page 22: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

4 Core Competencies To Emphasize (2015-17)

1) Studying linkages between molecules and populations

2) Developing tools and methods incumbent to an evidence generating medicine paradigm

3) Building bridges to the health system

4) Implementing and studying solutions in the healthcare delivery environment and working with IT in order to do so

Page 23: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Sarkar IN, Butte AJ, Lussier YA, Tarczy-Hornoch P, Ohno-Machado L. “Translational

Bioinformatics: Linking Knowledge Across Biological and Clinical Realms” Journal of the American

Medical Informatics Association. 2011. Jul-Aug;18(4):354-7.

Asserting Linkages Between Molecules and Populations

Page 24: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Developing Tools and Methods Incumbent to An Evidence Generating Medicine (EGM) Paradigm

Page 25: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Building Bridges to the Health System: Medical Data for Innovation, Integration and

Implementation (MDI3)

For more information: http://go.osu.edu/mdi3

To bring together a multidisciplinary

team of researchers and staff that is

focused on the development,

implementation and evaluation of

innovative methods for integrating

and transforming health data into

new knowledge that informs the

optimization of clinical interventions

and workflows, improvement of health

and health care quality, and reduction

of health care delivery costs at our

institution.

Page 26: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

Implementing and Studying Solutions in the Healthcare Delivery Environment: Working With IT

•Proven Technologies

•Best Practices

Current IT Operations

•Emergent Technologies (exist, but are on “cutting edge”)

•Operational Validation

Incremental Advancement

•Novel Technologies (do not already exist)

•Systems-Level Evaluation and Re-engineering

“Leap Frog” Advancement

Role of IT

Role of BMI

Both approaches to advancing

BMI and HIT are critical to the

near, medium, and long term

success of healthcare research,

operations, and analytics

Page 27: OSU Department of Biomedical Informatics Overview (March, 2015)

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“Information liberation + new incentives = rocket fuel for

innovation” – Aneesh Chopra (The Advisory Board Company)

[email protected]

"Without feedback from precise measurement,

invention is doomed to be rare and erratic. With it,

invention becomes commonplace” – Bill Gates (2013 Gates Foundation Annual Letter)

“Data is beyond simply quantifying, it is seeing

measurement as the intervention” – Carol McCall (GNS Healthcare)