BUFFALO, N.Y. -- Peter Winkelstein, MD, professor of pediatrics
at the University at Buffalo School of Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences, chief medical informatics officer for UBMD and former
chief of the division of general pediatrics, has been appointed
executive director of the UB medical school's Institute for
Healthcare Informatics.
In making the announcement, Michael E. Cain, MD, vice president
for health sciences at UB and dean of the medical school, cited
Winkelstein's extensive experience in medical management and in the
application of advanced medical informatics in clinical and
academic settings.
"Dr. Winkelstein has helped lead physician practices through the
adoption of electronic medical records," said Cain, "and he was
instrumental in the strategic and operational implementation of
UBMD's electronic medical record systems. His expertise will help
position the Institute for Healthcare Informatics as a vital
resource for UB's Clinical and Translational Research Center, UB
faculty and students, our hospital partners in the Academic Health
Center, the Western New York community and the SUNY system."
Winkelstein has held medical informatics positions in academic
and research institutions as well as in industry. He earned his MD
from UB and served as chief resident in pediatrics at UB; he also
earned an MBA from UB. A board-certified physician in pediatrics,
he was medical director of two outpatient clinics and director of
IT for the UB Department of Pediatrics. He joined Eclipsys
Corporation in Boston as a senior clinical informaticist, and later
was recruited back to Buffalo to serve as chair of clinical and
scientific informatics at Roswell Park Cancer Institute. He also
co-founded UB's Advanced Certificate in Medical/Health Informatics
program.
Winkelstein, whose research interest is ethical issues in
informatics, has published and presented extensively in the field.
A member of the American Medical Informatics Association, he is
past chair of its Ethical, Legal and Social Issues Working Group;
and past chair of its Ethics Committee.
Launched in 2010, with a $15 million investment in services and
equipment from Dell, the Institute for Healthcare Informatics is a
Tier II+ secure computing center (designed to host mission critical
servers and computer systems). At the institute, health care data
are stored, aggregated, and analyzed using innovative tools. Such
analysis leads to better monitoring of patient care, enhanced
measures to prevent disease and identification of more-effective
treatments, which leads to better patient outcomes and reduced
medical costs.
The institute facilitates clinical research and the development
of novel methods in biomedical informatics by securely housing
health data and providing core biomedical informatics expertise,
analytics and support to investigators and clients who store data
at the institute. The institute also serves as a resource for UB's
Clinical and Translational Research Center.
The institute is located in the Roosevelt Building, 923 Main
St., on the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus in downtown Buffalo.