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Medical Informatics (Research)

Course details
  • 2 Study options
  • Postgraduate
Course location
2 Campuses

Course summary

Advances in data capture platforms in both medicine and life sciences supported by modern computing and informatics have greatly energised the overlapping fields of Medical Informatics and Data Intensive Biomedicine.

The Centre For Medical Informatics at the Usher Institute of Population Health Sciences and Informatics was inaugurated at Edinburgh on 1 April 2015 (Harvard Medical School also establishing a department of Biomedical Informatics in 2015).

The combination of informatics and biomedicine is fundamental for advances towards 4P medicine (personalised, predictive, preventive, and participatory).

Current research opportunities in this area include:

  • Developing new perspectives on medicine and fundamental biology through application of quantitative approaches and data-intensive analyses to biomedical and other health related data.

  • Real-time generation, analysis and interpretation of health data to foster the creation of learning health systems, which aim to enhance the quality, safety and efficiency of care.

  • The development of new challenges for informatics systems (software, hardware and socio-technical) in healthcare and medicine.

  • Developing and evaluating new technologies to promote health and wellbeing.

  • To study and inform policy deliberations on strategies and approaches to digitising health systems and services.

  • Safe and secure management and storage of digitised data in ways that enables secondary uses of these data.

  • Social, ethical and legal issues of data intensive research and digitised health care.

Supervisors

Research group leaders within the Centre For Medical Informatics offer projects as first PhD supervisors. In addition, group leaders from the other two centres in the Usher Institute (the Centre for Population Health Sciences and the Centre for Global Health Research) act as either co-supervisors, or, depending on the specific topic and primary methodology of the PhD, as first supervisors.

Second (or third) supervisors from University research centres outwith Usher and other associated institutes e.g. the Institute of Genetics and Cancer and Asthma UK Centre for Applied Research may also be available.

Before Applying

Before submitting an online application, prospective students should contact an academic member of staff who may act as first supervisor in order to align their research proposal with one of the Institute's main areas of research. A list of contacts for PhD supervisors can be found on our website.

How to apply

Fees and funding

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Course options

The University of Edinburgh

The University of Edinburgh
Old College
South Bridge
Edinburgh
EH8 9YL

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