Newswise — The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) has chosen Johns Hopkins Children’s Center neonatologist Christoph Lehmann, M.D., to lead its new medical informatics branch.

One of Lehmann’s first assignments in his new position will be to design a model electronic pediatric health record as a prototype for pediatricians and hospitals.

As the founding director of the academy’s newly created Child Health Informatics Center (CHIC), Lehmann will develop, implement and oversee medical informatics programs to help pediatricians and pediatric hospitals in their adoption of such proliferating tools as electronic medical records, computer-based medication delivery systems and computer-based patient safety programs.

Last year’s federal stimulus package intensified the push for adopting such programs nationwide and sent many pediatricians scrambling to do so.

“There is no longer any doubt that pediatric practices should go digital, yet how to go about it remains less than clear,” says Lehmann, who is also director of clinical information technology at Hopkins Children’s. “For the pediatrician in practice, there are many unanswered questions.”

Among the most burning ones, he says, are how to choose the right type of electronic health record (EHR) to best fit the needs and size of a practice, and what the pros and cons are of the different EHR types available.

A pioneer in the field of medical informatics, Lehmann became interested in the medical application of information technology in the mid-1990s, when it was still considered a “fringe” activity.

Since then, Lehmann has designed, developed and implemented several computer-based applications, used at Hopkins Children’s and elsewhere, including a computerized order tool to reduce medication errors in children undergoing cancer treatment, an online infusion calculator to reduce medication errors in children undergoing IV infusions, a system that monitors lab values of critically ill preemies and alerts physicians when their scores become abnormal, and a Web-based program to approve special categories of restricted antibiotics as a faster and safer alternative to phone or fax orders.

Most recently, Lehmann and George Kim, M.D., also a medical informatician at Hopkins, conceived and launched the journal Applied Medical Informatics, devoted to original research and commentary on the use of computer automation in the day-to-day practice of medicine. Lehmann and Kim are the journal’s editor in chief and managing editor, respectively.

In 2009, Lehmann co-authored and published Pediatric Informatics, the first textbook on this subject, together with Kim and Kevin Johnson, M.D., former chief resident in pediatrics at Hopkins.

Lehmann is also the co-founder and chief information officer of Dermatlas, an open-access international Web database for pediatricians and dermatologists.

For more information:

New Medical Informatics Journal To Launch In Decemberhttp://www.hopkinschildrens.org/New-Medical-Informatics-Journal-To-Launch-In-December.aspx

Web-Based Tool Streamlines Approval, Reduces Excessive Antibiotic Use http://www.hopkinschildrens.org/web-based-tool-streamlines-approval-reduces-excessive-antibiotic-use.aspx Tracking Computer-Based Error Reports Improves Patient Safety, Hopkins Study Finds http://www.hopkinschildrens.org/Tracking-Computer-Based-Error-Reports-Improves-Patient-Safety.aspx

Digital is Safer: Online Calculator and Chemotherapy Order Systems Reduce Medication Errors in Children, Hopkins Studies Show http://www.hopkinschildrens.org/newsDetail.aspx?id=2152 Hopkins Medicine magazine profile http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/hmn/W07/circling.cfm

Christoph Lehmann bio http://www.hopkinschildrens.org/Christoph-Lehmann-MD.aspx?terms=%40lastname_8+lehmann