High-dose vitamin C shows promise in pancreatic cancer treatment
High-dose vitamin C shows promise in pancreatic cancer treatment Full Story
The Center for Health Informatics (CHI) has provided research data and services to the enterprise since 2006. In 2015, the Department of Biomedical Informatics (BMI) was created and the CHI was moved under the Department of Biomedical Informatics.
The data services offered by the Center for Health Informatics (CHI) within the Department of Biomedical Informatics have been restructured to reduce complexity, lower costs, and increase throughput.
The UC Center for Health Informatics works in alignment with the CCTST, the home for clinical and translational scientists and trainees for the University of Cincinnati and its regional partners.
The UC Center for Informatics faculty participate in several biomedical and health informatics educational programs around the UC Academic Health Center.
The UC Center for Health Informatics (CHI) is the operational core for the Department of Biomedical Informatics (BMI) and is the academic home for health informatics at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine.
The CHI is the designated Honest Broker for UC Health to access data for research. The CHI maintains a close relationship with the Institutional Review Board and the Office of Research to ensure data are properly accessed, delivered and logged based on federal and university compliance requirements.
The CHI is a service core partially funded by the College of Medicine, Biomedical Informatics and the Center for Clinical & Translational Science and Training (CCTST) to provide services for Departments in the COM.
While the center's primary focus is on the sub-domains of health informatics concerned with clinical care, clinical research and public health, our faculty also collaborate closely with departments and divisions around UC and partner institutions that focus on other sub-domains biomedical and health informatics such as bioinformatics, computational biology and engineering.
High-dose vitamin C shows promise in pancreatic cancer treatment Full Story
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