Joon Lee is changing the way doctors make decisions and patients receive care.

For the last three years, Lee, a health informatics researcher with the School of Public Health and Health Systems, has been collaborating with researchers at MIT to answer some of Boston鈥檚 top clinicians鈥 most difficult questions.
鈥淲hen doctors are unsure about the best treatment option for a patient and can鈥檛 find answers by reading the latest published studies, they turn to our data analytic expertise,鈥 said Lee, an assistant professor in the Faculty of Applied Health Sciences.
Lee and his team are at the forefront of a field that harnesses the power of information technology to analyze health data and provide doctors with answers that would take years to obtain through clinical trials.
Waiting too long
鈥淭he whole clinical trial process takes way too long,鈥 said Lee. 鈥淔irst you have to wait for the trials to be completed, which can take years, then you have to wait for the results to be published, so add another year or two. After all that, how do you know the results are even applicable to your patient with a unique set of complications?鈥
That鈥檚 where health informatics comes in. By gathering and analyzing data on different treatment outcomes across a defined field of patients, there is potential to make specific recommendations to clinicians.
For Lee, this is the future of health care.
On the front lines
鈥淓ventually our goal is to automate the analytic process and make it accessible to clinicians on the front lines of care,鈥 he said. 鈥淒octors would have answers at their fingertips.鈥
But before this can happen, data from institutions and practices must be gathered and centralized.
鈥淭he process is still very manual,鈥 admitted Lee, who has been helping to manage and mine a hospital-specific database in Boston.
While many hospitals are moving towards electronic databases, a centralized database spanning institutions would allow informatics researchers to provide even more accurate recommendations to clinicians.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not going to happen overnight,鈥 said Lee. 鈥淏ut governments are offering incentives to hospitals to start building these databases.鈥
In the meantime, Lee will continue to work with clinicians on a case-by case basis. 鈥淢y job is to provide answers. There is always something to learn from data.鈥