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Transforming Data to Power Human Health
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Stand-alone School of Biomedical Informatics in the Country
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The first Doctorate in Health Informatics (DHI) program in the world
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Advancing healthcare through nine research centers
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100% online or classroom setting
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Practicum sites across the globe
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Scholarship funding available
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Part-time or full-time enrollment
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Located in the world's largest medical center

What is Biomedical Informatics?

Biomedical Informatics is a multidisciplinary field that harnesses the power of data and information technology to improve healthcare outcomes, advance medical research, and enhance patient care. It continues to play a significant role in the transformation of healthcare systems and the development of innovative solutions.

By collecting, processing and converting data into actionable information, knowledge, and intelligence, this highly interdisciplinary field focuses on collaborations with partners in clinical practice (e.g., medicine, nursing, dentistry, pharmacy, population health, etc.); the biomedical sciences; public and community health and many more.

In essence, we are “Transforming Data to Power Human Health!”

GRADUATE PROGRAMS

Graduate Certificate in Applied Biomedical Informatics
Graduate Certificate in Biomedical Informatics
Graduate Certificate in Health Data Science
Graduate Certificate in Pharmacy Informatics
Graduate Certificate in Public Health Informatics
Master of Science in Biomedical Informatics
Doctorate in Health Informatics
Doctor of Philosophy in Biomedical Informatics
Dual Degree Programs


DEPARTMENTS

Bioinformatics and Systems Medicine
Clinical Informatics and Health Informatics
Health Data Science and Artificial Intelligence

You can become an expert in the field and make an impact in healthcare in a variety of ways:

  • Clinical Decision Support: Use algorithms and data analysis to help clinicians make informed decisions regarding patient care.
  • Health Information Systems/Data Management: Digitize and centralize patient information making it more accessible to healthcare providers.
  • Disease Surveillance & Prevention: Analyze health data to identify trends, track disease outbreaks, and develop strategies to improve public health.
  • Personalized and Precision Medicine: Use of genetic and patient-specific data to tailor treatments and therapies to an individual's unique needs
  • Drug Discovery and Development: Analyze large datasets to identify potential drug candidates and predict their effectiveness.
  • Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning: Develop predictive models and analyze complex datasets.

COURSES OFFERED

BMI 6323 Data Mining in Biomedical Informatics (Machine Learning)

(classroom instruction)
2 hours lecture/3 hours laboratory
3 semester credit hours/meets part of advanced informatics competencies

The increased digitization of biomedical data has dramatically increased interest in methods to analyze large quantities of data. Data mining is the process of transforming this raw data into actionable knowledge, which has led to many spectacular advances in biomedicine. This course provides an introduction to data mining methods from a biomedical perspective. The primary focus will be on practical and commonly used machine learning techniques for data mining (e.g., decision trees, support vector machines, clustering) and how these techniques transform data into knowledge. Students will engage in hands-on projects that expose them to data mining methods.

BMI 7151 Seminar in Precision Medicine

1 semester credit hour
Lecture contact hours: 1
Prerequisites: Consent of instructor

Seminar in Precision Medicine will introduce and discuss recent advances, frontier technologies, case studies, and future direction in precision medicine. The topics cover precision medicine, bioinformatics, systems biology, pharmacogenomics, genetics, genomic medicine, study design, methodologies and computational tools. Students enrolled in the course for credit are required to give a seminar presentation, attend at least 80% of the weekly seminars, and fill out evaluation forms. Each student seminar must be supervised by a faculty member (not necessarily the student's advisor). The faculty member will work with students to ensure that the seminars are both appropriate and interesting for the audience.

BMI 6340 Health Information Visualization and Visual Analytics

(web-based and classroom instruction)
3 semester credit hours/meets part of research informatics components

This course introduces the basics of information visualization, which is the use of interactive visual representations of data to amplify human cognition. Properly constructed visualizations allow us to analyze data by exploring it from different perspectives and using the power of our visual system to quickly reveal patterns and relationships. This course uses practical, hands-on examples and exercises to teach the theory and application of information visualization for health data. The class emphasizes visual analysis of time-series data, ranking and part-to-whole relations, deviations, distributions, correlations, multivariate, and geographic data. You will also learn how to combine multiple visualizations into interactive dashboards and how to use Tableau, a state-of-the-art information visualization tool to produce and deliver visualizations and dashboards quickly and easily.

BMI 5390 Methods in Pharmacy Informatics

3 semester credit hours
Lecture contact hours: 2; Lab contact hours: 3
Web-based instruction

Methods for pharmacy informatics focuses on the opportunities and challenges in integrating information technology into contemporary pharmacy practice in acute and ambulatory settings. It is designed to introduce students to basic and practical informatics problems and solutions in pharmacy practice.

BMI 5313 Introduction to Electronic Health Records

Lecture contact hours: 2; Lab contact hours: 3
(web-based and classroom instruction)
3 semester credit hours/meets part of basic informatics components

This course is designed to provide informatics students with an overview of the key concepts regarding implementation of a clinically-oriented information system (e.g., an electronic medical record, computer-based provider order entry). The course will examine how health data are collected, how they are used and the impact of electronic records on the health data. The course will review standards, standards development, languages used, usability and issues related to information processing in health care. The course will review the impact of electronic records and patient portals on health and health care including, legal, financial, and clinical design issues. Challenges encountered during training and go-live will be discussed. Students will receive hands-on experience with an electronic health record in the training environment.

BMI 5007 Methods in Health Data Science

3 semester credit hours
Lecture contact hours: 2; Lab contact hours: 3
Web-based and classroom instruction
Prerequisite: Prerequisite quiz and Consent of instructor
Lab Fee: $30

The course introduces methods in health data science – defining the problem, accessing, and loading the data, formatting into data structures required for analysis. This course covers the basics of computational thinking to define a computational solution, methods to access healthcare data from variety of sources (EHR data, UMLS, Medline, etc.), and in different data formats. The students will apply methods for data wrangling and data quality assessments to structure the data for analysis.

BMI 5380 Principles and Foundations of Public Health Informatics

(web-based and classroom instruction)
2 hours lecture/3 hours laboratory
3 semester credit hours/meets part of the basic informatics competencies

This course provides foundational knowledge relevant to Public Health Informatics (PHI), and exposes students to emerging research and application areas in this field. Topics covered include: public health registries and databases, surveillance systems, data exchange and standards, interoperability issues, the role of informatics in health promotion, use of web 2.0 informatics tools to understand behavior change, public health communication and dissemination, public health policy, and project management.

BMI 7320 Topics for Artificial Intelligence in Cancer Discovery

3 semester credit hours
Lecture contact hours: 2; Lab contact hours: 3
Web-based and classroom instruction
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor
Enrollment only open to PhD students

This course introduces a few common deep learning architectures (e.g., convolution neural network, graph neural network, recurrent neural network and autoencoder) to the students who are new to AI. The primary aim of this course is to flatten the learning curve in AI and to provide students with a basis for further implementation of more complex models using enormous real-world data, especially in cancer research.

BMI 5330 Introduction to Bioinformatics

(web-based and classroom instruction)
3 semester credit hours/meets part of basic informatics competencies

The course gives a comprehensive entry-level introduction to bioinformatics. It covers a wide variety of topics in bioinformatics, including but not limited to sequence analysis, protein structure, genome analysis, database and transcription profiling. Two major goals are 1) to help students understand the scope, basic concepts and theory of bioinformatics; and 2) to become familiar with tools for bioinformatics-related data analysis. Programming skills are not necessary.

BMI 5302 Cognitive Science in Biomedical Informatics

(web-based instruction and classroom instruction)
(2 hours lecture/3 hours laboratory/week lecture/demonstration/discussion)
3 semester credit hours/meets part of basic informatics component

This course is an introduction to cognitive science – the interdisciplinary study of mind and behavior from an information processing perspective – and its application to biomedical informatics. The course begins with a basic introduction to human cognition and information processing (both symbolic and connectionist), then presents a broad survey of the biomedical informatics areas to which cognitive science has been applied. These areas include health problem solving and education, decision support systems, user-centered interfaces, and the design and use of controlled medical terminologies.

BMI 5328 System Analysis and Project Management

(web-based instruction) 3 semester credit hours

This course is an introduction to both systems analysis and project management. The student will have the opportunity to learn more about the approaches and tools available for systems analysis. Additionally, the student will learn more about the roles, responsibilities, and duties of a project manager. Moreover, the student will learn project management methods and core activities of a project manager as well as the tools and techniques required to ensure the success of a large healthcare information technology project such as the implementation of a system or the evaluation of an existing system. Specific emphasis will be on training and support during go-live, total costing of projects, and explicit change management techniques.

BMI 5004 Introduction to Clinical Healthcare

(2 hours lecture/3 hours laboratory/week lecture/demonstration/discussion)
3 semester credit hours/meets part of the basic informatics competencies
Prerequisites: Consent of instructor

This course will present a survey of modern American clinical health care for students without a health care background who are entering fields that interact with health care such as biomedical informatics, cancer biology, and translational science. It is not a health care system course and is not intended to teach students how to practice medicine. The course is not appropriate for students who have a health care background (e.g., international medical graduates). We will focus on how clinical health care is delivered, rather than on health care financing, administration, regulation or governance. Students will attend lectures and “mini rotations” during which they will visit operational health care settings including outpatient clinics (pediatric and adult), emergency departments, intensive care units, clinical research and surgical settings.

ADMISSION DEADLINES

PROGRAM FALL SPRING SUMMER
Certificate July 1 November 1 March 1
Master's July 1 November 1 March 1
PhD Dec. 1 July 1 N/A
DHI March 1 Only one DHI cohort will be admitted annually.

PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS

Programs Online In-Person Instruction Hours GRE Required
Certificate & 4+1 Yes Yes (optional) 15 No
Masters - Research Yes Yes (optional) 39 No
Masters - Applied Yes No 39 No
PhD No Yes (required) 93 Yes
DHI Yes Once a semester 63 (96 without a MS) No

CAREER OUTLOOK

Career Outcomes for Graduates from McWilliams School of Biomedical Informatics Program
$78k $73k $99k 67%
Average Alumni MS Starting Salary Average Nationwide MS Salary Average Alumni PhD Starting Salary of our Alumni earn greater than $90k

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