Description


Zoom meetings continue to be free for members  and complimentary for non-members as we continue to recover from the pandemic


 

Taking Charge of Our Own Healthcare Data by Bridging the Digital Divide in Healthcare

 

Please join us at 12:00 pm on Friday, December 2nd for an exciting and interactive presentation on how to take charge of your own healhcare data by bridging the digital divide in healthcare.

 

 

 

Healthcare Data is Very Valuable. Housed in many places, it’s slowing starting to come together. Just like we have a digital footprint, now there is a healthcare data foot print, it can be fitbits, biometrics, blood pressure checks at CVS while waiting or smart home tools in addition to various Electronic Medical Record systems from your doctor’s office visit, to hospital systems. 

Join the NY Metro ACM Chapter as We Interactively Discuss:

 

 

How technology has evolved to enable innovations in “managing health data”, like how google democratized internet search.  Dr. Bukhari will share an out-of-the-box socio-technical approach that his team has developed to enhance medical and healthcare content FAIRness (Findability, Accessibility, Interoperability, and Reusability) and to bridge data-induced digital divide. Our approach democratizes the process of semantic content authoring currently available to sophisticated users by extending cutting-edge semantic web infrastructure to research and education communities at large. Furthermore, our system enables peer-to-peer knowledge creation that will open career progression opportunities for a socio-economically diverse pool of learners, especially the under-represented minorities in research and academia.

 

Our NY Metro ACM Chapter is proud to have Dr. Syed Bukhari of St. John's University help us to learn how to Take charge of our own healthcare data by bridging the digital divide in healthcare.

This event will benefit businesses, non profit organizations, students and job seekers alike, so we hope to see all of you attend and participate.