6. the potential of integrating Open Source and public sector data in this arenaa theoretical toolkit using PHC, HES, socio-demographic and local authority data 2
7.
8. 4 Example GIS application in PHC (1) Source: Packham and Robinson, 2009. Nottingham: Nottingham City NHS.
9. 5 Example GIS application in PHC (2a) Source: Field, Applied Geography 2000;20:305-332.
10. 6 Example GIS application in PHC (2b) Source: Field, Applied Geography 2000;20:305-332.
11. 7 NHS Atlas of Variation in Healthcare Source: http://www.sepho.org.uk/extras/maps/NHSatlas/atlas.html.
12. 8 Dotted Eyes Health Portal Source: Dotted Eyes. http://www.dottedeyes.com/software/health_portal/overview.php.
13. 9 Public health observatory interactive atlases Source: http://www.lho.org.uk/LHO_Topics/Analytic_Tools/InteractiveMaps.aspx.
14.
15. data sourcesGoogle Maps, patient data, healthcare facility locations, drive/walk times, boundaries, population-level socio-demographic data (Mosaic Public Sector) 10
32. Some Open Source and Internet jargon WMS – Web Map Service presents raster mapping data WFS– Web Feature Service presents vector feature data WCS– Web Coverage Service presents grid coverage data WPS– Web Processing Service geospatial data processing services CWS– Catalogue Service for the Web presents resource descriptive metadata SWE– sensor web enablement series of standards for sensors GeoXACML– Access Control Markup Language (see GeoDRM) Geospatial eXtensible spatial authorising KML– Keyhole Markup Language (see GML) Google’s XML-schema for ‘Earth’ and ‘Maps’ data ...
33.
34. Thank you and it’s time for your questions! Edgar Samarasundera (e.samarasundera@imperial.ac.uk) 26