Digital Health at NZ Universities

There are a range of undergraduate and postgraduate university courses in health informatics available in NZ. Key courses are listed below per university.

For more information on these courses please contact the academic institution directly.

UC

University of Canterbury

Master in Health Sciences (Health Information Management endorsement)

The rapid expansion of information technology, combined with an escalating demand for health services and changing patterns of health care delivery, have had a major impact on the health sector.

The transition from ā€œIndustrial Age Medicineā€ to ā€œInformation Age Health Careā€ (British Medical Journal - 1997, 314, 1495) has created unprecedented pressure for new ways to provide, present, manage and monitor health information, with information technology central to these processes. World wide, there is now huge investment in such technology, which in one way or another is used by most health practitioners on a daily basis.

Advanced training in health information management is increasingly being sought by health sector administrators and managers, technical and support staff, and clinicians whose effective performance of their role is increasingly reliant on up-to-date and well-managed information.

Courses include:

  • HLTH401 Health and Health Systems
  • HLTH402 Health Information Management
  • GEOG401 Geographies of Health and Well-being
  • HLTH407 Bioethics
  • HLTH410 Health Leadership and Management
  • HLTH433 Bioethics A and HLTH434 Bioethics B
  • HLTH460 Critical Appraisal in Health Research and approved courses to at least 1 EFTS.

For more information see:
canterbury.ac.nz/graduate-school/subjects/health-information-management/

Contact: Associate Professor Ray Kirk

University of Auckland

Postgraduate Diploma in Health Sciences (in Health Informatics)

The Postgraduate Diploma in Health Sciences (in Health Informatics) is for clinicians, allied health workers, associated degrees in health, and those with a computing background and healthcare experience.

You can complete the Diploma (8 courses) or a Certificate (4 courses) to equip you as a health informatician. PhDs and Masters thesis topics include (but are not limited to): health informatics strategy; leadership for innovation development; usefulness and usability of ED clinical information systems; patient portals and why doctors refer patients to online mental health tools.

For further information, please refer to the University of Auckland website.

Bachelor of Health Sciences - Pathways

The Digital Health Pathway relates to a wide range of topics in health innovation, health IT and health intelligence. It is a good preparation for postgraduate study in health informatics.

For further information, please refer to the University of Auckland website.

Contact: @vanessaselak

Massey University

Master of Management (Health Service Management) - MMgt(HSM) / Postgraduate Diploma in Health Service Management - PGDipHSM

The PGDipHSM is an advanced programme of professional education for people working in the health and disability sectors, who wish to prepare themselves for positions in health service management. Current clinical leaders and managers seeking qualifications and further training will also benefit from undertaking the PGDipHSM. You can study part time or full time by flexible Distance Learning. Course content and assessments can be applied to your own workplace or area of interest.

Core topics covered are Health Systems Management and Health Informatics & Information Management. Elective papers (select two) include Health Policy, Contemporary Issues in Health Service Management, Health Research Design and Method, Health Economics or other approved 700-level paper.

Successful students may proceed to the (Master of Management (Health Service Management) by completing the professional practice paper or to the Master of Business Studies (MBS) or Master of Nursing degrees (MN). In addition the MMgt(HSM) may be credited towards RACMA fellowship. Progression to PhD study from the MBS may be an option.

Contact: Dr Inga Hunter I.Hunter@massey.ac.nz

Victoria University of Wellington

Victoria University has several programmes in health that have an ICT component, and ICT programmes where you can focus your research in the area of health informatics.

Health Services Research Centre

http://www.victoria.ac.nz/sog/researchcentres/health-services-research-centre

The HSRC, which is based in the School of Government at Victoria, undertakes research into health services and health systems policy issues in New Zealand. Much of this work involves analysis of large data sets or data from Health Information Systems. PhD and Master’s research in areas such as: Maori health, Pacific health, Health systems research and evaluation, Priority setting in healthcare, Access to healthcare research and evaluation. Information systems for primary health care are of particular interest at the present point in time, including how improved access to information and patient records might work well for patients.

School of Information Management

http://www.victoria.ac.nz/sim/study/postgraduate/phd

The Information Systems group in the School of Information Management (SIM) includes PhD candidates working on ICT systems and applications in the health sector, and enquiries are welcome.

Faculty of Engineering and Computer Science

http://www.victoria.ac.nz/ecs/study/postgraduate-study

The Faculty of Engineering and Computer Science offers graduate programmes and Master’s and PhD study in a number of areas related to health informatics including the Communications and Signal Processing (CaSP) group, which works with biomedical devices, and the Robotics group.

School of Biological Sciences

The Postgraduate Diploma in Clinical Research(PGDipCR) provides clinical researchers with the skills for undertaking drug development and clinical trials. Largely taught online by clinicians from Capital & Coast District Health Board and the Medical Research Institute of New Zealand. Aimed at: biomedical scientists, doctors, nurse, biostatisticians, allied health professionals and psychologists.

Graduate School of Nursing, Midwifery and Health

http://www.victoria.ac.nz/nmh
The GSNMH supervises PhD and Master’s research in Nursing Informatics, usually with support from another relevant school.

Email nmh@vuw.ac.nz for further information.

University of Otago

PGCert and PGDip in Digital Health with option to progress to Master of Health Science (MHealSc)

Description

Offered by the Otago Business School, the Department of Information Science, and in partnership with the Otago Medical School, the Postgraduate Certificate and Postgraduate Diploma in Digital Health are designed for people working or planning to work in health sector management and leadership roles.

Delivered online, the course will suit full-time or part-time students who are seeking a qualification in this area but who cannot physically be in Dunedin or are unable to take leave from employment or other commitments.

Both programmes are taught fully online with the flexibility to attend class virtually and study from home. Live lectures allow you to engage with classmates and teachers in real time.

  • The Postgraduate Certificate in Digital Health (PGCertDigHeal) can be completed in a minimum of 12 months.

  • The Postgraduate Diploma in Digital Health (PGDipDigHeal) can be completed in a minimum of 24 months.

Postgraduate Certificate in Digital Health (PGCertDigHeal)

  • DIGH 701 Principles of Digital Health and Informatics

  • DIGH 703 Digital Health Technologies and Systems

Postgraduate Diploma in Digital Health (PGCertDigHeal)

  • DIGH 701 Principles of Digital Health and Informatics

  • DIGH 703 Digital Health Technologies and Systems

Plus elective papers to a total of 60 points chosen from the following list*

  • DIGH 706 Research Methods for Digital Health (30 points)
    Note: With approval from the Academic Co-ordinator, a relevant Research Methods paper may be substituted for DIGH 706.

  • DIGH 707 Digital Health Information Governance and Ethics (30 points)

  • DIGH 708 Patient-Centred Digital Health (15 points)

  • DIGH 709 Emerging Technologies in Digital Health (15 points)

  • A candidate may be permitted to substitute papers at an equivalent level of study, to a maximum of 30 points.

Papers

Paper code Year Title Points Teaching period
DIGH701 2023 Principles of Digital Health and Informatics 30 points Semester 1
DIGH703 2023 Digital Health Technologies and Systems 30 points Semester 1
DIGH706 2023 Research Methods for Digital Health 30 points Semester 2
DIGH707 2023 Digital health Information Governance and Ethics 30 points Semester 2
DIGH708 2023 Patient-Centred Digital Health 15 points Semester 2
DIGH709 2023 Emerging Technologies in Digital Health 15 points Semester 2

Contact: Dr Chris Paton, Director, Digital Health Programme: chris.paton@otago.ac.nz


Read this on the eHealth Forum to access richer content

6 Likes

Dave Parry in in Australia now.

1 Like

Anyone can edit that post and fix any details that are out of date.

I’ll see if I can get it iFramed into the HiNZ website when we are done - is that doable, @Rose?

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And Vanessa Selak is the contact person for UoA

Thanks Derek, I’ve added some bits about Otago. Cheers, Chris

I’ve sorted out the formatting so that things look prettier and rolled in several of the changes suggested above.

The table of contents work nicely now per institution too. I’ve also added some images for each university.

@chris.paton - as you are the Academic member of @moderators I’ve made you the ā€˜owner’ of the wiki above. Let me know if the conflict of interest is too great!

Lastly, I’ve published it here:
https://ehealthforum.nz/pub/digital-health-at-nz-universities

Email addresses?

As this is going to be public, I wonder if published email addresses are the best option. From the perspective of the Forum, it would be great to have @mentions instead as this allows viewing of the user’s profile and provides a modicum of privacy.

But then again, these folk have their emails plastered up all over the place and have to live with that kind of exposure anyway. What do you think?

Thanks Nathan, there are a couple of errors on the Massey detail.
Cheers Inga

Hi Nathan, happy with my email address being public - it is on our website anyway. I don’t think the information for the other universities is correct at the moment so probably should wait until each university has checked it before publishing. e.g. Auckland is now ā€˜digital health’ and Victoria have new/different programmes, etc.

Cheers,

Chris

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Yeah okay, I’ve ā€˜de-published’ it for now.

If anyone knows more about the university courses above, please do edit / change anything that is wrong.

And if you know someone who knows more about this stuff, please point them to the wiki so they can!

Thanks Inga, would you mind fixing them or dispatching someone to do so?

Would the Massey Master of Analytics count? In my mind yes, but then bias. What do others think?

I say include it Greig

Ray Kirk from Canterbury University has retired. I’ll get in touch with Arindam Basu and ask him to do an update

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Thanks, @KarenDay,

Now I have stopped to read the details, the M.Analytic has a business orientation and not a health orientation. I am guessing this is why the focus is on SAS as the statistical and analytic language used as no one in the health world can afford the licences.

Apologies for the red herring.

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Unfortunately not Nathan.

But we do already have a page on our website with a list of courses in New Zealand -
https://www.hinz.org.nz/page/UniversityCourses

Thanks Rose.

It was identified at the recent Entry for Nurses into Health Informatics webinar that the existing page on the HiNZ website (https://www.hinz.org.nz/page/UniversityEducation) is quite out of date. The wiki up above is an update of that (and probably still needs a little work).

When was https://www.hinz.org.nz/page/UniversityCourses last published (there is no date apparent for us regular users)? And do we need both text and a table?

It might be best from the maintenance side of things to have them as published (Wiki) pages here on the Forum which the HiNZ website refers to. Are you sure we can’t embed an iFrame?

It would be great if HiNZ on principle provides metadata for each page when updates happen. I’ve found it difficult to navigate to updated pages - my searches often take me to old pages with redundant content or content that indicates an update will happen and it’s not there. A good start would be the date of update. Health on the Net has a good set of website trustworthiness principles that we can start using on the HiNZ website and gradually include them all over time.

This page is better https://www.nicer.org/en/background-legal-basis/hon-code/ At the very least I think we should have a date for latest update on each HiNZ page.

Sad to see that HoN has closed for business. They did really good work.

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Yes, I agree with your statement ā€œAt the very least I think we should have a date for latest update on each HiNZ page.ā€ this should not be very costly and totally feasible. it is common practice.

1 Like