Prof Tim Lambert

Prof Tim Lambert

Event Name Prof Tim Lambert
Start Date Sep 12, 2019 12:00 pm
End Date Sep 12, 2019 1:00 pm
Duration 1 hour
Description

Disruptive or simple disruption? A case history of translational integrated health informatics. Please register for this free event held at Macquarie University,  Seminar Room, Level 1, 75 Talavera Road, Macquarie University.

Video of Tim Lambert's presentation

About the seminar

The clinical context is that of premature cardiometabolic disease and early preventable mortality in one of the highest-risk groups in the community – those with severe and enduring psychosis-related mental illnesses.

This talk will outline the development of a clinician and patient-facing web-based information system that functions to store data for an 8-person interdisciplinary team, provide graphical simulation feedback to patients to enhance engagement and adherence, to act as an interactive repository of key academic knowledge to enhance clinical skills, to communicate findings back to the eMR (Cerna-based), and to effortlessly handle integrated administrative functions for clinical, research, and administrative uses.

The service is known as the Collaborative Centre for Cardiometabolic Health in Psychosis (ccCHiP), operating across Sydney Local Health District.

Speaker profile

Tim Lambert is Professor of Psychiatry at Concord Clinical School, University of Sydney. He is the clinical and academic director of the Collaborative

Centre for Cardiometabolic Health in Psychosis (ccCHiP). ccCHiP is a key player in Sydney Health Partners, a multi-region NHMRC Translational Research collaboration.

Professor Lambert has spent 25 years researching, teaching and providing clinical

services in the area of schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders, with a particular emphasis on treatments and patient outcomes. He has a portfolio of interests in translational aspects of clinical psychopharmacology and neurosciences spanning clinical psychosis research, outcomes research, service delivery models, clinical training, and multimedia-based education.

His primary focus at present is on the development of integrated models of care for chronic multi-system comorbidity in persons with severe psychotic disorders.

Chair

Dr Baki Kocaballi

Need more information?

Contact AIHI on 02 9850 2400 or email aihi@mq.edu.au

Subscribe to our newsletter

Back to the top of this page