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Journal of Biomedical Informatics
Volume 34, Issue 3, June 2001, Pages 195-219
 
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doi:10.1006/jbin.2001.1015    How to Cite or Link Using DOI (Opens New Window)
Copyright © 2001 Academic Press. All rights reserved.

Methodolical Review

Health Geomatics: An Enabling Suite of Technologies in Health and Healthcare

M. N. Kamel Boulos1, A. V. Roudsari and E. R. Carson

Centre for Measurement and Information in Medicine, School of Informatics, City University, London, EC1V 0HB, United Kingdom

Received 7 March 2001. 
Available online 14 March 2002.

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Abstract

This Methodolical Review describes how health geomatics can improve our understanding of the important relationship between location and health, and thus assist us in Public Health tasks like disease prevention, and also in better healthcare service planning. The reader is first introduced to health geography and its two main divisions, disease ecology and healthcare delivery, followed by an overview of the basic concepts and principles of health geomatics. Topics covered include geographical information systems (GIS), GIS modeling, and GIS-related technologies (remote sensing and the global positioning system). We also present a number of real-life health geomatics applications and projects, with pointers to further studies and resources. Finally, we discuss the barriers facing the adoption of GIS technology in the health sector, including data availability/quality issues. The authors believe that we still need to combat many cultural and organizational barriers, including “spatial illiteracy” among healthcare workers, while making the tools cheaper and easier to learn and use, before health geomatics can become a mainstream technology in the health sector like today's spreadsheets and databases.

Author Keywords: geomatics; geographical information systems (GIS); remote sensing; global positioning system (GPS); spatial analysis; decision support systems; epidemiology; disease ecology; public health; healthcare delivery.


 
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