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Paper Details

Accessing the public MIMIC-II intensive care relational database for clinical research.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak
26
2013
MIMIC, MIMIC-II, Patients, acute kidney injury
Access to Information, Biomedical Research, Critical Care, Databases, Factual, Humans, Internet, Software, User-Computer Interface

Datasets

PhysioNetPhysioNet, the moniker of the Research Resource for Complex Physiologic Signals, was established in 1999 under the auspices of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), as described further below. The PhysioNet Resourceâ¿¿s original and ongoing missions were to conduct and catalyze for biomedical research and education, in part by offering free access to large collections of physiological and clinical data and related open-source software. In cooperation with the annual Computing in Cardiology conference, PhysioNet also hosts an annual series of challenges, focusing research on unsolved problems in clinical and basic science. Members of PhysioNetâ¿¿s team are actively involved in innovative work on analysis of physiologic signals, both from basic and translational perspectives.Link
PhysioNetPhysioNet, the moniker of the Research Resource for Complex Physiologic Signals, was established in 1999 under the auspices of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), as described further below. The PhysioNet Resourceâ¿¿s original and ongoing missions were to conduct and catalyze for biomedical research and education, in part by offering free access to large collections of physiological and clinical data and related open-source software. In cooperation with the annual Computing in Cardiology conference, PhysioNet also hosts an annual series of challenges, focusing research on unsolved problems in clinical and basic science. Members of PhysioNetâ¿¿s team are actively involved in innovative work on analysis of physiologic signals, both from basic and translational perspectives.Link
PhysioNetPhysioNet, the moniker of the Research Resource for Complex Physiologic Signals, was established in 1999 under the auspices of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), as described further below. The PhysioNet Resourceâ¿¿s original and ongoing missions were to conduct and catalyze for biomedical research and education, in part by offering free access to large collections of physiological and clinical data and related open-source software. In cooperation with the annual Computing in Cardiology conference, PhysioNet also hosts an annual series of challenges, focusing research on unsolved problems in clinical and basic science. Members of PhysioNetâ¿¿s team are actively involved in innovative work on analysis of physiologic signals, both from basic and translational perspectives.Link
PhysioNetPhysioNet, the moniker of the Research Resource for Complex Physiologic Signals, was established in 1999 under the auspices of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), as described further below. The PhysioNet Resourceâ¿¿s original and ongoing missions were to conduct and catalyze for biomedical research and education, in part by offering free access to large collections of physiological and clinical data and related open-source software. In cooperation with the annual Computing in Cardiology conference, PhysioNet also hosts an annual series of challenges, focusing research on unsolved problems in clinical and basic science. Members of PhysioNetâ¿¿s team are actively involved in innovative work on analysis of physiologic signals, both from basic and translational perspectives.Link
PhysioNetPhysioNet, the moniker of the Research Resource for Complex Physiologic Signals, was established in 1999 under the auspices of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), as described further below. The PhysioNet Resourceâ¿¿s original and ongoing missions were to conduct and catalyze for biomedical research and education, in part by offering free access to large collections of physiological and clinical data and related open-source software. In cooperation with the annual Computing in Cardiology conference, PhysioNet also hosts an annual series of challenges, focusing research on unsolved problems in clinical and basic science. Members of PhysioNetâ¿¿s team are actively involved in innovative work on analysis of physiologic signals, both from basic and translational perspectives.Link
PhysioNetPhysioNet, the moniker of the Research Resource for Complex Physiologic Signals, was established in 1999 under the auspices of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), as described further below. The PhysioNet Resourceâ¿¿s original and ongoing missions were to conduct and catalyze for biomedical research and education, in part by offering free access to large collections of physiological and clinical data and related open-source software. In cooperation with the annual Computing in Cardiology conference, PhysioNet also hosts an annual series of challenges, focusing research on unsolved problems in clinical and basic science. Members of PhysioNetâ¿¿s team are actively involved in innovative work on analysis of physiologic signals, both from basic and translational perspectives.Link
PhysioNetPhysioNet, the moniker of the Research Resource for Complex Physiologic Signals, was established in 1999 under the auspices of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), as described further below. The PhysioNet Resourceâ¿¿s original and ongoing missions were to conduct and catalyze for biomedical research and education, in part by offering free access to large collections of physiological and clinical data and related open-source software. In cooperation with the annual Computing in Cardiology conference, PhysioNet also hosts an annual series of challenges, focusing research on unsolved problems in clinical and basic science. Members of PhysioNetâ¿¿s team are actively involved in innovative work on analysis of physiologic signals, both from basic and translational perspectives.Link
PhysioNetPhysioNet, the moniker of the Research Resource for Complex Physiologic Signals, was established in 1999 under the auspices of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), as described further below. The PhysioNet Resourceâ¿¿s original and ongoing missions were to conduct and catalyze for biomedical research and education, in part by offering free access to large collections of physiological and clinical data and related open-source software. In cooperation with the annual Computing in Cardiology conference, PhysioNet also hosts an annual series of challenges, focusing research on unsolved problems in clinical and basic science. Members of PhysioNetâ¿¿s team are actively involved in innovative work on analysis of physiologic signals, both from basic and translational perspectives.Link
PhysioNetPhysioNet, the moniker of the Research Resource for Complex Physiologic Signals, was established in 1999 under the auspices of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), as described further below. The PhysioNet Resourceâ¿¿s original and ongoing missions were to conduct and catalyze for biomedical research and education, in part by offering free access to large collections of physiological and clinical data and related open-source software. In cooperation with the annual Computing in Cardiology conference, PhysioNet also hosts an annual series of challenges, focusing research on unsolved problems in clinical and basic science. Members of PhysioNetâ¿¿s team are actively involved in innovative work on analysis of physiologic signals, both from basic and translational perspectives.Link
PhysioNetPhysioNet, the moniker of the Research Resource for Complex Physiologic Signals, was established in 1999 under the auspices of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), as described further below. The PhysioNet Resourceâ¿¿s original and ongoing missions were to conduct and catalyze for biomedical research and education, in part by offering free access to large collections of physiological and clinical data and related open-source software. In cooperation with the annual Computing in Cardiology conference, PhysioNet also hosts an annual series of challenges, focusing research on unsolved problems in clinical and basic science. Members of PhysioNetâ¿¿s team are actively involved in innovative work on analysis of physiologic signals, both from basic and translational perspectives.Link
PhysioNetPhysioNet, the moniker of the Research Resource for Complex Physiologic Signals, was established in 1999 under the auspices of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), as described further below. The PhysioNet Resourceâ¿¿s original and ongoing missions were to conduct and catalyze for biomedical research and education, in part by offering free access to large collections of physiological and clinical data and related open-source software. In cooperation with the annual Computing in Cardiology conference, PhysioNet also hosts an annual series of challenges, focusing research on unsolved problems in clinical and basic science. Members of PhysioNetâ¿¿s team are actively involved in innovative work on analysis of physiologic signals, both from basic and translational perspectives.Link