Information About

Opengalen




''Open''GALEN is a not-for-profit organisation where you can download an open source medical terminology. The terminology is written in a formal language, called GRAIL (GALEN Concept Representation Language).
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BACKGROUND

The GALEN technologies were developed with research funding provided by the European Community Framework III ( GALEN Project ) and Framework IV ( GALEN-In-Use Project) programmes.

Early phases of the GALEN Programme developed the GRAIL concept modelling language, experimented with different structures for the GALEN Common Reference Model , and, in parallel, tested the usefulness of the approach with a series of clinical demonstrator projects.

Later phases of the GALEN Programme, during the late 1990s, have concentrated on robust implementations of GRAIL and the Terminology Server , development of the GALEN Common Reference Model in both scope and detail, and development of tools and techniques to enable the further development, scaling-up and maintenance of the model. An important additional focus has been in developing tools and techniques with which we can map the information found in existing coding and Medical Classification schemes to the GALEN Common Reference Model .

''Open''GALEN has been set up as a not-for-profit Dutch Foundation by the universities of Manchester and Nijmegen to make the results of the GALEN projects available to the world.


PROJECTS

The GALEN tools and technologies were used in France for the development of the French classification of procedures Classification Commune Des Actes Médicaux (CCAM).


REFERENCES

  • Rogers J.E., Roberts A., Solomon W.D., van der Haring E.J., Wroe C.J., Zanstra P.E., Rector, A.L. (2001), GALEN Ten Years On: Tasks and Supporting tools, Proceedings of MEDINFO2001, V.Patel et al. (Eds) IOS Press;: 256-260

  • Napel H.T., Rogers J.E. (2001), Assessment of the GALEN Methodology on Holistic Classifications for Professions Allied to Medicine Proceedings of MEDINFO2001, V. Patel et al. (Eds) IOS Press;: 1369-1373

  • Rogers J.E., Rector, A.L. (2000), GALEN's Model of Parts and Wholes: Experience and Comparisons Annual Fall Symposium of American Medical Informatics Association, Los Angeles CA. Hanley & Belfus Inc. Philadelphia PA;:714-8

  • Roberts A., Solomon W.D., Rogers J.E., Wroe C.J. , Rector, A.L. (2000), Having our cake and eating it too: How the GALEN Intermediate Representation reconciles internal complexity with users' requirements for appropriateness and simplicity, Annual Fall Symposium of American Medical Informatics Association, Los Angeles CA. Hanley & Belfus Inc. Philadelphia PA;:819-23



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