In recent years,
clinical guidelines and protocols have become the main instruments for
disseminating best practice in medical practice. They are designed to
promote safe practices, reduce
inter-clinician practice variations and support decision-making in patient care while
containing the costs of care. So far, they have been proved useful in improving the
quality and consistency of healthcare by supporting healthcare quality assessment
and assurance, clinical decision making, workflow and resource management etc. The benefits
of using clinical guidelines are widely recognized, yet the guideline development
process is time- and resource-consuming, and the size and complexity of guidelines
remains a major hurdle for effectively using them in clinical care.
Several methods have been or are being developed to support the development, deployment,
maintenance and use of computerised evidence-based guidelines, using techniques from Artificial
Intelligence, Software Engineering, Medical Informatics and Formal Methods.
Various different representation formalisms and computational techniques are used e.g.
rule-based, logic-based, knowledge-based and workflow-based. Computerised guideline-related
research spans a wide range of the AI community
as well as other research areas. The current meeting followed other conferences
(1st European Workshop on Computerized Guidelines and Protocols, Leipzig, 2000;
Symposium on Computerized Guidelines and Protocols, Prague 2004;
AIME track, Artificial Intelligence in
Medicine in Europe, Aberdeen 2005),
and aimed to bring together researchers from different branches
of AI to
examine cutting-edge approaches to guideline modeling and development and to
consider how different communities can cooperate to address these challenges.
Abstracts, papers and many presentations can be browsed (see links left).
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