Abstract
The vision of integrating information - from a variety of sources, into the way people work, to improve decisions and process - is one of the cornerstones of biomedical informatics. Thoughts on how this vision might be realized have evolved as improvements in information and communication technologies, together with discoveries in biomedical informatics, and have changed the art of the possible. This review identified three distinct generations of 'integration' projects. First-generation projects create a database and use it for multiple purposes. Second-generation projects integrate by bringing information from various sources together through enterprise information architecture. Third-generation projects inter-relate disparate but accessible information sources to provide the appearance of integration. The review suggests that the ideas developed in the earlier generations have not been supplanted by ideas from subsequent generations. Instead, the ideas represent a continuum of progress along the three dimensions of work flow, structure, and extraction.
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CITATION STYLE
Stead, W. W., Miller, R. A., Musen, M. A., & Hersh, W. R. (2000). Integration and beyond: Linking information from disparate sources and into workflow. In Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association (Vol. 7). Hanley and Belfus Inc. https://doi.org/10.1136/jamia.2000.0070135
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