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Alejandro Metke-Jimenez

Researcher at Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

Publications -  31
Citations -  697

Alejandro Metke-Jimenez is an academic researcher from Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation. The author has contributed to research in topics: SNOMED CT & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 25 publications receiving 426 citations. Previous affiliations of Alejandro Metke-Jimenez include Queensland University of Technology & Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital.

Papers
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Cadec: A corpus of adverse drug event annotations

TL;DR: A new rich annotated corpus of medical forum posts on patient-reported Adverse Drug Events (ADEs), which contains text that is largely written in colloquial language and often deviates from formal English grammar and punctuation rules.
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Text and Data Mining Techniques in Adverse Drug Reaction Detection

TL;DR: In order to highlight the importance of contributions made by computer scientists in this area so far, the existing approaches are categorized and review, and most importantly, areas where more research should be undertaken are identified.

GA4GH: International policies and standards for data sharing across genomic research and healthcare

Heidi L. Rehm, +223 more
TL;DR: The Global Alliance for Genomics and Health (GA4GH) aims to accelerate biomedical advances by enabling the responsible sharing of clinical and genomic data through both harmonized data aggregation and federated approaches.
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Ontoserver: a syndicated terminology server.

TL;DR: Ontoserver is a clinical terminology server implementation that aims to overcome some of the challenges that have hindered adoption of standardised clinical terminologies and is used in several organisations throughout Australia.
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Towards achieving semantic interoperability of clinical study data with FHIR

TL;DR: A proposal for a clinical study architecture to not only facilitate the communication of clinical study data but also its context so that the data that is being communicated can be unambiguously understood at the receiving end.