Commentary

Big Data and the art of medicine


 

Whether or not their detractors admit it, EHRs do form the backbone of a new and very powerful information network – one which many believe has the power to revolutionize health care. While we certainly do not view the "data revolution" as the panacea others have claimed it to be, we do recognize that the right tools are emerging to enable physicians to learn from data and implement new, novel, and "disruptive" strategies to improve patient care.

Art is not static; the canvas, the paints, and the viewpoints change over time as experience evolves. Leonardo da Vinci furthered the world’s understanding of perspective. Pablo Picasso led a revolution in modern art. Each was different from his predecessors, and each expressed a human need to understand and portray the world in a manner consistent with his age. The same is true of our age and the art of medicine. The science has changed, as has the viewpoint and perspective from which we provide care. Our ability to record, retrieve, and understand health and disease will never be the same. But the attention to the patient is ever present. The necessity of interpreting the shifting world of health and disease to provide an empathic understanding of each patient’s individual and unique place in the world will never go away. Therein lies the Art.

Dr. Notte is a family physician and clinical informaticist for Abington (Pa.) Memorial Hospital. He is a partner in EHR Practice Consultants, a firm that aids physicians in adopting electronic health records. Dr. Skolnik is associate director of the family medicine residency program at Abington Memorial Hospital and professor of family and community medicine at Temple University, Philadelphia. He is editor in chief of Redi-Reference Inc., a software company that creates mobile apps.

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