2010 AMIA Summit on Clinical Research Informatics
Thanks to all who attended, making this event a great success!
The American Medical Informatics Association (AMIA) held its' 1st annual AMIA Summit on Clinical Research Informatics (CRI Summit) on March 12-13, 2010, at the Parc 55 Hotel San Francisco, California.
There has been rapid and substantial growth of the field of Clinical Research Informatics (CRI) in recent years. The CRI Summit was a great venue to share work, develop new collaborations, and identify potential avenues of research and development that will ultimately advance discovery-driven healthcare. Active participation was encouraged in this new Summit from biomedical informatics professionals, clinicians, clinical investigators, information and communication technologists, computer scientists, community and public health scientists, developers, and anyone else working to advance clinical research, translational research, and drive discovery-directed healthcare.
The Scientific Program Committee designed a comprehensive scientific program with lectures, presentations, posters, and panels that featured the state of the art at the intersection of clinical/translational research and biomedical informatics. This first annual 2010 AMIA CRI Summit will ultimately help our community catalyze discoveries and innovations in biomedical research and healthcare.
We hope to see you at next year's meeting, in San Francisco, March 2011!
Peter Embi, MD, MS
2010 CRI Program Committee Chair
More information about the AMIA Summits on Translational Science
The AMIA Summits on Translational Science are a set of joint conferences held in the same venue with each focused exclusively on translational bioinformatics and clinical research informatics. The AMIA Summit on Translational Bioinformatics (TBI Summit) and AMIA Summit on Clinical Research Informatics (CRI Summit) immediately follow one another, providing a unique opportunity to bring together the finest minds in bioinformatics and clinical research informatics from the academia, industry, government and non-profit sectors along with those with an interest in the full translational science spectrum. By adjoining these meetings, we hope to synergize work at their intersecting areas building on the strategy of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to stimulate advanced translational research (T1 & T2), thereby bringing added value to both the clinical research informatics and bioinformatics communities and accelerating benefits to the larger healthcare community. To toggle back and forth between the two summits, click the gateway links above.
Click here to view the list of attendees.

CLICK HERE to view the On-Site Program








