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Category: Health News

Washington, DC - National Institutes of Health Director Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D., today approved a federal report that lays out the long-term scientific vision for the NIH’s National Library of Medicine (NLM), the world’s largest biomedical library. This vision, presented at the 110th meeting of the Advisory Committee to the Director (ACD), calls for NIH to position the NLM as a unifying force in biomedicine that promotes and accelerates knowledge generation, dissemination and understanding in the United States and internationally.

The report also cites the need to make NLM the epicenter for biomedical data science, not just at NIH, but across the biomedical research enterprise. In addition, the report recommends dramatically expanding NLM’s activities to include research conducted beyond NIH’s walls to funded institutions, enabling it to have a greater and wider impact on data science than ever before. NIH plans to work with Congress to implement the necessary infrastructure changes to move this vision forward.

“The pace of change in biomedical data science is moving at lightning speed with the increasing use of big data and the melding of many diverse data types,” said Dr. Collins.  “It is critical that NIH pave the path forward  for data science, and this move will enable researchers, medical practitioners and many others to use the wealth of vast knowledge and data available to them through the NLM.”

To capitalize on the emerging opportunities in data science, Dr. Collins tasked a working group of his ACD to lay out a strategic vision for the NLM to maintain its global leadership in biomedical and health information. Comprised of experts in the fields of biomedical research, bioinformatics, library sciences, publishing, and patient care, the working group assessed the current mission, organization and programmatic priorities of the NLM.  The group presented its recommendations for a strategic vision today to the ACD, and it was subsequently unanimously endorsed.  In summary, the ACD envisioned NLM to be a modernized conceptualization of a library and formulated a series of recommendations to guide its future:

Dr. Collins accepted the ACD recommendations in full, but acknowledged that NIH will need to consider the requirements and infrastructure implications for centering NIH’s biomedical data science activities within the NLM.  In addition, NIH has launched a nationwide search for the director of the NLM to replace Donald Lindberg, M.D., who served as the NLM director for more than 30 years and retired in March 2015.