This book is the first to approach healthcare informatics from the perspective of innovation. Drawing on the unique pairing
of information and innovation, it offers an analysis to help readers rethink information technology, knowledge management,
interprofessional collaboration and the generation of wisdom in the context of healthcare.The concept of "translational" research
stems from the medical and health sciences, and features bidirectional and recursive information-generation processes involving
bed-to-bench and bench-to-bed approaches. Based partly on this, translational systems science has become a new trend within
systems sciences, motivated by the need for practical applications that help people by offering holistic systems solutions
for complex ideas. Today, numerous innovations are emerging in diversified clinical practices, and there has been a remarkable
convergence of new technologies in disciplines like genome therapy, immunotherapy, iPS cells, imaging diagnosis, personalized
medicine, molecular targeted drugs, surgical robots, and remote nursing. Innovation is also occurring in health management
fields, including health records, insurance reimbursement methods, quality control, and safety. In these areas, big data and
machine learning are accelerating innovation. Behind these innovations are the creation, sharing, bridging, and translation
of data, information, knowledge, and wisdom, and as such health informatics is critical in promoting health innovations.The
book explores the horizons of health informatics, introducing cutting-edge practical cases and theoretical frameworks, including
but not limited to fields such as big data, machine learning, drug discovery, interprofessional collaboration, electronic
health records, robotics, telenursing, quality improvement, and safety.