Our program offers an exploration of pragmatic, interdisciplinary areas of study immediately relevant in contemporary health systems or research enterprises. We bring together a diverse group of ...
Biomedical informatics, one of the world’s fastest-growing interdisciplinary fields, is the latest graduate degree program offered by the University of Chicago Graham School of Continuing Liberal and ...
The Master’s in Biomedical and Health Informatics program is a 30 credit program. It can be completed in one year or students may choose to do the program at a slower or part-time pace. Students may ...
Graduate study in biomedical informatics provides an in-depth foundation in evaluating and managing concepts and systems related to information management in healthcare, and biomedical research ...
Portland State University and Oregon Health & Science University are collaborating on an accelerated biomedical informatics graduate degree. Graduates of this five-year program earn both a bachelor's ...
Biomedical informatics, one of the world's fastest-growing interdisciplinary fields, is the latest graduate degree program offered by the University of Chicago Graham School of Continuing Liberal and ...
The new degree program is offered through the Graham School of Continuing Liberal and Professional Studies. Aimed at working adults in the healthcare field — such as physicians, nurses, pharmacists, ...
The University of Chicago is launching a master's degree program in biomedical informatics in response to the growing shortage of specialists in that field as hospitals and physician practices work to ...
The University of Chicago has launched a master's degree program in biomedical informatics in response to a shortage of specialists needed to analyze data from EHRs. The program is geared toward ...
Harvard Medical School will launch a new Department of Biomedical Informatics on July 1, according to HMS Dean Jeffrey S. Flier. The new department will build on a center in biomedical informatics ...
A philosopher at heart, Nicholas Schork was an unlikely future director of a cancer programme. To make ends meet, the philosophy graduate student tapped into his more lucrative skills as a computer ...