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Developing capacity in health informatics in a resource poor setting: lessons from Peru

Ann Marie Kimball1 email, Walter H Curioso1,2 email, Yuzo Arima1 email, Sherrilynne Fuller1 email, Patricia J Garcia2 email, Jose Segovia-Juarez2 email, Jesus M Castagnetto2 email, Fabiola Leon-Velarde2 email and King K Holmes1 email

University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, 98195, USA

Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Av Honorio Delgado 430 Urbanizacion Ingenieria-San Martin de Porres, Lima 31, Peru

author email corresponding author email

Human Resources for Health 2009, 7:80doi:10.1186/1478-4491-7-80

Published: 27 October 2009

Abstract

The public sectors of developing countries require strengthened capacity in health informatics. In Peru, where formal university graduate degrees in biomedical and health informatics were lacking until recently, the AMAUTA Global Informatics Research and Training Program has provided research and training for health professionals in the region since 1999. The Fogarty International Center supports the program as a collaborative partnership between Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia in Peru and the University of Washington in the United States of America. The program aims to train core professionals in health informatics and to strengthen the health information resource capabilities and accessibility in Peru. The program has achieved considerable success in the development and institutionalization of informatics research and training programs in Peru. Projects supported by this program are leading to the development of sustainable training opportunities for informatics and eight of ten Peruvian fellows trained at the University of Washington are now developing informatics programs and an information infrastructure in Peru. In 2007, Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia started offering the first graduate diploma program in biomedical informatics in Peru.


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