The Morningside Initiative is a public-private activity that has evolved from an August, 2007, meeting at the Morningside Inn, in Frederick, MD, sponsored by the Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center (TATRC) of the US Army Medical Research Materiel Command. Participants were subject matter experts in clinical decision support (CDS) and included representatives from the Department of Defense, Veterans Health Administration, Kaiser Permanente, Partners Healthcare System, Henry Ford Health System, Arizona State University, and the American Medical Informatics Association (AMIA). The Morningside Initiative was convened in response to the AMIA Roadmap for National Action on Clinical Decision Support and on the basis of other considerations and experiences of the participants. Its formation was the unanimous recommendation of participants at the 2007 meeting which called for creating a shared repository of executable knowledge for diverse health care organizations and practices, as well as health care system vendors.
The rationale is based on the recognition that sharing of clinical knowledge needed for CDS across organizations is currently virtually non-existent, and that, given the considerable investment needed for creating, maintaining and updating authoritative knowledge, which only larger organizations have been able to undertake, this is an impediment to widespread adoption and use of CDS. The Morningside Initiative intends to develop and refine (1) an organizational framework, (2) a technical approach, and (3) CDS content acquisition and management processes for sharing CDS knowledge content, tools, and experience that will scale with growing numbers of participants and can be expanded in scope of content and capabilities. Intermountain Healthcare joined the initial set of participants shortly after its formation. The efforts of the Morningside Initiative are intended to serve as the basis for a series of next steps in a national agenda for CDS. It is based on the belief that sharing of knowledge can be highly effective as is the case in other competitive domains such as genomics. Participants in the Morningside Initiative believe that a coordinated effort between the private and public sectors is needed to accomplish this goal and that a small number of highly visible and respected health care organizations in the public and private sector can lead by example. Ultimately, a future collaborative knowledge sharing organization must have a sustainable long-term business model for financial support.
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- The Morningside Initiative: Collaborative Development of a Knowledge Repository to Accelerate Adoption of Clinical Decision Support
- Greenes, Robert (Author)
- Bloomrosen, Meryl (Author)
- Brown-Connolly, Nancy E. (Author)
- Curtis, Clayton (Author)
- Detmer, Don E. (Author)
- Enberg, Robert (Author)
- Fridsma, Douglas (Author)
- Fry, Emory (Author)
- Goldstein, Mary K. (Author)
- Haug, Peter (Author)
- Hulse, Nathan (Author)
- Hongsermeier, Tonya (Author)
- Maviglia, Saverio (Author)
- Robbins, Craig W. (Author)
- Shah, Hemant (Author)
- College of Health Solutions (Contributor)
- Digital object identifier: 10.2174/1874431101004010278
- Identifier TypeInternational standard serial numberIdentifier Value1874-4311
- The final version of this article, as published in The Open Medical Informatics Journal, can be viewed online at: https://benthamopen.com/ABSTRACT/TOMINFOJ-4-278
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Greenes, R., Bloomrosen, M., Brown-Connolly, N. E., Curtis, C., Detmer, D. E.,...Shah, H. (2010). The Morningside Initiative: Collaborative Development of a Knowledge Repository to Accelerate Adoption of Clinical Decision Support. The Open Medical Informatics Journal, 4(1), 278-290. doi:10.2174/1874431101004010278