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- Peter J. Haug, MD, FACMI
Peter J. Haug, MD, FACMI
Year Elected: 2001
Institution When Elected: LDS Hospital
Peter Haug is the Director of Medical Informatics for the Urban Central Region, a three-hospital group of Intermountain Health Care. He is currently housed at the LDS Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. He is also an Associate Professor of Medical Informatics at the University of Utah and serves as adjunct faculty for the School of Nursing Informatics Program. He received a BA in mathematics and MD degree from the University of Wisconsin. Subsequently, he completed a residency in internal medicine at the LDS Hospital and a fellowship in medical informatics at the University of Utah.
Dr. Haug's principal interests lie in the areas of medical information systems, medical decision support, and natural language processing. During his career, he has contributed to the development of the HELP system, a pioneering hospital information system, and has worked for a number of years in the area of applied decision support. He has been a participant in the development of the Arden Syntax for representing medical logic, first during its formulation as a produce of the American Society for Testing and Materials and, subsequently, within the responsible Health Level 7 committees. He remains an active member of the HL7 committees seeking to extend Arden and is a participant in HL7 committees seeking to develop a standard for authoring and exchanged medical guidelines. In addition, Dr. Haug has integrated a research interest in statistical decision making into his natural language research. The result has been a novel NLP approach, featuring a semantic component based in Bayesian statistics. Dr. Haug continues to focus a large segment of his time and effort on training new informaticians. He directs the Health Information Systems track in the University of Utah's informatics program and has contributed to a number ofinformatics training efforts, including the National Library of Medicine's informatics course at the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, from 1992 through 1995.

