Vimla L. Patel

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Vimla L. Patel
Born
Fiji
NationalityCanadian
Alma materUniversity of Otago
McGill University
Known forCognitive science methods applied to understanding physician’s reasoning
International Health
Decision making and Medical errors
Human factors and health information technology
AwardsFellow, Royal Society of Canada
Fellow, ACMI
Fellow, New York Academy of Medicine
Scientific career
FieldsHealth Informatics
Cognitive Psychology
InstitutionsMcGill University
Columbia University
UTHealth
ASU
New York Academy of Medicine
Notable studentsMarco Ramoni

Vimla Lodhia Patel FRSC is a Fijian-born Canadian cognitive psychologist and biomedical informaticist.

Patel has worked in the area of biomedical informatics, in particular studying the mediating roles of technology on performance. Her work includes studies of medical errors and error reduction in emergency care and other critical medical environments, (including telephone triage). Her past work in health cognition includes studies of risk-taking behavior and sexual decision making as it pertains to HIV in youth and adolescents. Her current work focuses mostly on identifying underlying cognition in medical error and learning.

Biography and career[edit]

Patel was born in Fiji and was educated at Southland Girls High School and the University of Otago in New Zealand.[1] After moving to Australia and then Canada, she obtained a PhD at McGill University in Montreal, before working as a professor.[1] She was a founding member of HEALnet (Health Evidence Application and Linkage Network), which made seminal contributions furthering informatics research and application in Canada. She was also a member of the InterMed Collaboratory, which developed guidelines for medical decision support, and has done extensive work in India, Africa, and Colombia in cross-cultural cognition research.

In 2000 she became director of the Laboratory of Cognition and Decision Making in the department of Biomedical Informatics at Columbia University, where she was also faculty in the department of Psychiatry and Teacher's College. From 2007 to 2009, she served as interim chair and vice chair of Department of BMI at Arizona State University. Patel was a professor of biomedical informatics and co-director of the Center for Cognitive Informatics and Decision Making at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston from 2009 to 2011. As of November 2011, Patel joined the New York Academy of Medicine as a senior research scientist and is the head of the Center for Cognitive Studies in Medicine and Public Health and is an adjunct professor of biomedical informatics at Columbia University in New York.

Research[edit]

In 1978 Elstein, Shulman and Sprafka applied cognitive science methods to investigate physicians’ clinical competence, developing a model of hypothetico-deductive reasoning which proposed that physicians reason by generating and testing a set of hypotheses to explain clinical data. This is an example of backward (hypothesis-to-data) reasoning.[2] In 1986, Patel and Groen demonstrated that experts who accurately diagnosed complex clinical problems used forward reasoning (data to hypothesis), in contrast to novice subjects who used backward reasoning and misdiagnosed or partially diagnosed the same problems.[3]

Patel also applied text comprehension methods to understanding the use of clinical practice guidelines with the goal of increasing adoption of best practices.[4] Patel and colleagues have recently argued for new paradigm for error studies, where instead of zero error tolerance, detection and correction of potential error is viewed as an integral part of cognitive work in a complex workplace.[5]

She is the author of more than 300 publications in cognitive psychology, biomedical informatics, medical education and related fields.[6]

Honors[edit]

  • Member, Committee on Patient Safety and Health Information Technology, Institute of Medicine (IOM). 2010-2011.
  • Science and Technology Research Award (STAR) with Edward Shortliffe, UTHealth, Houston,Texas. 2009
  • Vice Chair, AMIA Program Committee. 2009
  • Service Faculty of the Year Award, School of Computing and Informatics, Arizona State University. 2008
  • Member, Clinical Research Review Committee, The National Center for Research Resources (NCRR). 2007-2009
  • Selected for Marquis Who’s Who in the World. 2007
  • Member, Committee on Opportunities in Basic Research in the Behavioral and the Social Sciences for the Military, National Research Council, U.S.A. 2006
  • Elected Fellow, New York Academy of Medicine. 2004
  • Vice President (Member Service), International Medical Informatics Association Governing Board. 2003-2006
  • Outstanding Manuscript Award in Educational Methodology, Journal of Dental Education. 2002
  • Member, Bio-engineering Training and Education Program, National Science Foundation, USA. 1999-2007
  • Chair, Editorial Committee, Medinfo2001, International Medical Informatics Association, London, UK. 1999
  • D.Sc. (honorary), University of Victoria, BC, Canada. 1998
  • Member, Roundtable on Work, Learning and Assessment, National Research Council, U.S.A. 1997
  • Elected Member, Board of Governors, Cognitive Science Society. 1997
  • Elected Fellow, American College of Medical Informatics. 1996
  • Fellow, The Royal Society of Canada (elected by the Academy of Humanities and Social Sciences). 1996[6][7]
  • Elected “Woman of Science” for the year (Sweden). 1994

Publications[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Otago set researcher on track for success". Otago Daily Times. 11 December 2015. Retrieved 30 April 2023.
  2. ^ Elstein, A.S., Shulman, L.S., and Sprafka, S.A. Medical Problem-Solving: An Analysis of Clinical Reasoning. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1978.
  3. ^ Patel, V.L. & Groen, G.J. (1986) Knowledge-based solution strategies in medical reasoning. Cognitive Science, 10, 91-116.
  4. ^ Patel, V.L., Kaufman, D.R. (2006) Cognitive Science and Biomedical Informatics. - E.H. Shortliffe & J.J. Cimino (Eds.) Biomedical Informatics: Computer Applications in Health Care and Biomedicine. New York: Springer-Verlag. P176.
  5. ^ Patel, V.L., Cohen, T., Murarka, T., Olsen, J., Kagita, S., Myneni, S., Ghaemmaghami, V., (2010) Recovery at the Edge of Error: Debunking the Myth of the Infallible Expert. Journal of Biomedical Informatics.
  6. ^ a b "Vimla Patel". New York Academy of Medicine. Retrieved 2019-12-06.
  7. ^ "Fellows | The Royal Society of Canada". rsc-src.ca. Retrieved 2019-12-06.

External links[edit]