Friday, November 4, 2011

If you need a published paper and can't remember the publisher or the journal



If you need a published paper and can't remember the publisher or the journal, try this link.


if it turns out to be:
  1. Healthcare Quarterly
  2. Healthcare Papers
  3. Healthcare Policy
  4. Electronic Healthcare
  5. Canadian Journal of Nursing Leadership
  6. World Health & Population . . .

or anything else published on http://www.longwoods.com/

send me the details and we will help.


Anton Hart
Publisher.


Longwoods.com is down -- but not out

Estimated relaunch date: November 8, 2011.


If you need an article please send me a note with the details. So far we have been able to meet everyone's needs. Thanks for standing by.

Anton Hart
Publisher


Email: ahart@longwoods.com 


Tel: 416 864 9667

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Longwoods.com is down

We apologize. www.longwoods.com is down. The servers are not performing. We have teams working on rebuilding the website and its more than 22,000 pages of ideas, policies and leading practices.

Stay tuned as we prepare our re-launch.

Anton Hart
Publisher

Email: ahart@longwoods.com 

Tel: 416 864 9667

Friday, July 22, 2011

Molecule serves as a bridge between the two arms of the immune system

Signaling Molecule Identified As Essential For Maintaining a Balanced Immune Response




St. Jude Children's Research Hospital scientists show that the molecule serves as a bridge between the two arms of the immune system that provides a new mechanism guiding T cell differentiation
MEMPHIS, Tenn. , July 22, 2011 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- St. Jude Children's Research Hospital investigators have identified a signaling molecule that functions like a factory supervisor to ensure that the right mix of specialized T cells is available to fight infections and guard against autoimmune disease.

The research also showed the molecule, phosphatase MKP-1, is an important regulator of immune balance. Working in laboratory cell lines and mice with specially engineered immune systems, scientists demonstrated that MKP-1 serves as a bridge between the innate immune response that is the body's first line of defense against infection and the more specialized adaptive immune response that follows. The results are published in the July 22 print edition of the scientific journal Immunity.
The results raise hopes that the MKP-1 pathway will lead to new tools for shaping the immune response, said Hongbo Chi, Ph.D., assistant member of the St. Jude Department of Immunology and the study's senior author. The co-first authors are Gonghua Huang, Ph.D., and Yanyan Wang, Ph.D., both postdoctoral fellows in Chi's laboratory.

The findings provide new details about how dendritic cells regulate the fate of naïve or undifferentiated T cells. Dendritic cells are the sentinels of the innate immune response, patrolling the body and ready to respond at the first sign of infection.

Investigators were surprised that a single molecule regulated production of three out of the four major subsets of T cells, which each play different roles. MKP-1 is a negative regulator of the enzyme p38, which is part of the MAP kinase family of enzymes that control pathways involved in cell proliferation, differentiation and death.

Chi and his colleagues demonstrated that MKP-1 works in dendritic cells by altering production of protein messengers known as cytokines. Those cytokines determine which subset of specialized T cells the undifferentiated T cells are fated to become. In this study, scientists showed that MKP1 controls production of the cytokines that yield T helper 1 (Th1), T helper 17 (Th17) and regulatory T (Treg) cells. Th1 cells combat intracellular bacterial and viral infections. Th17 cells fight extracellular bacterial infections and fungi. Treg cells help with immune suppression, protecting against autoimmune diseases.

The study showed that suppression of p38 by MKP-1 promotes production of interleukin 12 (IL-12), which leads to an increase in Th1 cells. Rising IL-12 coincides with a drop in interleukin 6 (IL-6) and a corresponding dip in production of Th17. MKP-1 also inhibited the generation of Treg cells by down-regulating production of a third cytokine, TGF-beta.
Knocking out MKP-1 in mice disrupted production of IL-12 and IL-6 in dendritic cells as well as the anti-bacterial and anti-fungal immune response, researchers reported. MKP-1 deficiency also promoted T-cell driven inflammation in a mouse model of colitis, an inflammatory disease.
"MKP-1 is the first signaling molecule found in dendritic cells to program differentiation of these diverse T- cell subsets," Chi said.

Previous work by other scientists focused on T cell differentiation in response to stimulation by cytokines. "This research fills a gap in our understanding of dendritic cell-mediated control of T-cell lineage choices," Chi said. "T cells do not recognize pathogens directly, but dendritic cells do. T cells need dendritic cells to tell them what to do. In this study, we show that MKP-1 signaling in dendritic cells bridges the innate and adaptive immune responses by regulating cytokine production."
Other authors are Lewis Shi and Thirumala-Devi Kanneganti, both of St. Jude.
The research was supported in part by the National Institutes of Health, the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, the Cancer Research Institute, The Hartwell Foundation and ALSAC.

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital is internationally recognized for its pioneering research and treatment of children with cancer and other catastrophic diseases. Ranked one of the best pediatric cancer hospitals in the country, St. Jude is the first and only National Cancer Institute-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center devoted solely to children. St. Jude has treated children from all 50 states and from around the world, serving as a trusted resource for physicians and researchers. St. Jude has developed research protocols that helped push overall survival rates for childhood cancer from less than 20 percent when the hospital opened to almost 80 percent today. St. Jude is the national coordinating center for the Pediatric Brain Tumor Consortium and the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study. In addition to pediatric cancer research, St. Jude is also a leader in sickle cell disease research and is a globally prominent research center for influenza.www.stjude.org.

IBMs Watson's role in healthcare could be instrumental in making care affordable. Watch this space as we explore the explorers.

The DeepQA Research Team

Watson is a computer system like no other ever built. It analyzes natural language questions and content well enough and fast enough to compete and win against champion players at Jeopardy!
Watson Avatar
This is no easy task for a computer, given the need to perform over an enormously broad domain, with consistently high precision and amazingly accurate confidence estimations in the correctness of its answers.
Watson’s performance on Jeopardy! is just the opening salvo for a research mission built on decades of experience in deep Content Analysis, Natural Language Processing, Information Retrieval, Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

SIIM Launches Mentoring Network at SIIM 2010 in Support of Imaging Informatics Research and Science

1April 15, 2010 - Leesburg, VA - The Society for Imaging Informatics in Medicine (SIIM) will announce its new Mentoring Network designed to encourage, support, and develop researchers in the field of imaging informatics at the 2010 SIIM Annual Meeting.  Mentors and mentees will have new opportunities to connect via the SIIM Mentoring Network.

The program design facilitates the mentoring process by bringing together experts in imaging informatics with those entering the discipline. Finding a mentor in this specific field is often challenging, as many clinical imaging departments do not have dedicated informatics programs. A mentee may wish to undertake a research project, but may not have an expert to connect with to pursue such work. Mentors are SIIM members who volunteer for participation in this program and qualify from being a part of an environment that fosters professional growth.  Anyone may join as a mentee, and gain valuable guidance from SIIM members with experience doing imaging informatics research. For details on the SIIM Mentoring Network, see www.siimweb.org/mentoring.

The SIIM 2010 Annual Meeting, June 3-6 in Minneapolis, provides excellent opportunities for learning, networking, and development. A Scientist/Physician networking reception will take place on June 5 at SIIM 2010 and provide the opportunity for mentors and mentees to meet each other face to face.  The "Writing a Grant or RFP - Key Steps for Success" learning lab on Sunday, June 6 provides another great opportunity for career advancement.

The scientific program includes promising research from informaticists around the globe, and includes New Investigator Travel Awards, the Roger Bauman Best Student Paper Award and scientific poster and demo prizes for talented young researchers. Scientific abstracts for presentations at SIIM 2010 are all available online for review.

SIIM encourages and supports research in the field of imaging informatics through its Annual Meeting scientific program and awards
(www.siimweb.org/awards) and through the Research & Education giving program (www.siimweb.org/donate). The Research & Education Fund supports the annual Dwyer Lectureship at the Annual Meeting, research programs such as Transforming the Radiological Interpretation Process (TRIP(tm)), and quality research of young scholars through the SIIM informatics Grant Program. SIIM Grant recipients will be presenting their work in the scientific session of learning tracks 4 and 8 at SIIM 2010.

More information about the SIIM 2010 Annual Meeting and SIIM's new Mentoring Network can be found at www.siim2010.org. Members of the press are invited to register for the meeting online at www.siim2010.org/press.

About SIIM

The Society for Imaging Informatics in Medicine (SIIM) is proud to be the leading health care professional organization representing interests and goals of those who work with and whose work is affected by the rapidly changing world of information and imaging technologies. SIIM seeks to spearhead research, education, and discovery of innovative solutions, and to explore new technologies and applications to improve the delivery of medical imaging services and the quality and safety of patient care. For more information, visit www.siimweb.org.


Contact:
Caroline Wilson
Director, Publications & Media
Society for Imaging Informatics in Medicine (SIIM) 703-723-0432, ext. 315 cwilson@siimweb.org www.siimweb.org



Monday, April 5, 2010

BRITISH COLUMBIA HEALTH SYSTEM SAVES $34M ON COMPUTING SERVICES

March 31, 2010

Ministry of Health Services


VICTORIA – British Columbia’s health-care system will save $34 million over the next six years on computer software and related services with a new contract between Microsoft and the BC Health Authority Shared Services Organization (SSO), said Health Services Minister Kevin Falcon.

“Even though we are increasing the budget for health care by approximately 15 per cent over the next three years, we still have challenges in the system,” said Falcon. “To date, through the Shared Services Organization, we have been able to save $115.5 million. By using this innovative purchasing model and leveraging our provincial buying power, we are able to put those savings directly back into the health-care system to go towards front-line patient care.”

The contract covers computer software and related services to support British Columbia’s six health authorities. The six-year term will run until 2016, and is replacing the previous contract, which was set to expire in 2012. In working with Microsoft, SSO has saved approximately $34 million over six years.

The contract includes all Microsoft products that are currently used by health authorities, or any that are expected to be used in the next six years. The new pricing is also now able to be extended to affiliated not-for-profit health-care organizations that are funded either in whole or in part by one of the Province’s health authorities.

In addition, SSO will now be able to move unused software licences between health authorities. Under the previous contract, if a health authority needed additional services, they would have had to purchase a new licence, even if one was available from a different health authority.

“SSO is just one example of the ways in which the health authorities are collaborating to reduce administration and purchasing costs, saving the health-care system valuable funds,” said Lynda Cranston, chair of the SSO board and president and CEO of the Provincial Health Services Authority.

“Microsoft is proud to partner with British Columbia, through the SSO, to create a platform to deliver innovative health-care solutions for B.C. residents,” said Eric Gales, president, Microsoft Canada. “Sustainability, accessibility and quality of care are cornerstones of good health-care delivery, and this partnership will enable and support the Province in all three areas, while delivering significant costs savings for today and the future.

The SSO Technology Services conducted appropriate due diligence, and determined that Microsoft was the only vendor able to provide the services needed in a cost-effective way. The proposed contract was reviewed and endorsed by the chief information officer for the Province of British Columbia.

Previously announced contracts negotiated by the SSO include providing home oxygen, cardiac, renal dialysis and operating room supplies to the health authorities. The total projected cumulative savings for SSO’s first five years of operation (until March 2014) will be $181 million, which surpasses the $150 million in savings initially identified by the SSO.

The SSO assumed accountability for supply-chain services for all six health authorities in February 2009. It combines the buying power of the Province’s health authorities by amalgamating several purchasing processes into contracts with larger volumes of standardized products. Key to its business approach are increased process efficiency, standardization, capital avoidance and combining the buying power of its members.



Media contact:

Bernadette Murphy
Media Relations Manager
Ministry of Health Services
250 952-1887 (media line)



For more information on government services or to subscribe to the Province’s news feeds using RSS, visit the Province’s website at www.gov.bc.ca.