%0 Journal Article %J Yearb Med Inform %D 2021 %T Using Open Source, Open Data, and Civic Technology to Address the COVID-19 Pandemic and Infodemic. %A Kobayashi, Shinji %A Falcón, Luis %A Fraser, Hamish %A Braa, Jørn %A Amarakoon, Pamod %A Marcelo, Alvin %A Paton, Chris %X

OBJECTIVES: The emerging COVID-19 pandemic has caused one of the world's worst health disasters compounded by social confusion with misinformation, the so-called "Infodemic". In this paper, we discuss how open technology approaches - including data sharing, visualization, and tooling - can address the COVID-19 pandemic and infodemic.

METHODS: In response to the call for participation in the 2020 International Medical Informatics Association (IMIA) Yearbook theme issue on Medical Informatics and the Pandemic, the IMIA Open Source Working Group surveyed recent works related to the use of Free/Libre/Open Source Software (FLOSS) for this pandemic.

RESULTS: FLOSS health care projects including GNU Health, OpenMRS, DHIS2, and others, have responded from the early phase of this pandemic. Data related to COVID-19 have been published from health organizations all over the world. Civic Technology, and the collaborative work of FLOSS and open data groups were considered to support collective intelligence on approaches to managing the pandemic.

CONCLUSION: FLOSS and open data have been effectively used to contribute to managing the COVID-19 pandemic, and open approaches to collaboration can improve trust in data.

%B Yearb Med Inform %8 2021 Apr 21 %G eng %R 10.1055/s-0041-1726488 %0 Journal Article %J Stud Health Technol Inform %D 2019 %T Governance and Sustainability of an Open Source Electronic Health Record: An Interpretive Case Study of OpenDolphin in Japan. %A Poba-Nzaou, Placide %A Kume, Naoto %A Kobayashi, Shinji %X

Electronic Health Records (EHRs) are at the heart of reforms aiming for improving the efficiency and quality of citizens healthcare services. Although there is still some skepticism, open source (OS) EHR is a growing phenomenon in health informatics. Given the widespread adoption of OS software (OSS) in several domains, including operating systems, and enterprise systems, the repeated shortfalls faced by healthcare organizations with dominant proprietary EHRs create an opportunity for other alternatives, such as OSS to demonstrate their abilities in addressing these well-documented problems, including inflexibility, high costs, and low interoperability. However, scholars have expressed extensive concerns about the sustainability of OS EHR. Recognizing that OSS project sustainability relies on their governance arrangements, this case study reports on the evolution of the governance and sustainability of a Japanese OS EHR project and provides rich insights to other open source EHR initiative stakeholders, including physicians, developers, researchers, and policymakers.

%B Stud Health Technol Inform %V 264 %P 739-743 %8 2019 Aug 21 %G eng %R 10.3233/SHTI190321