Clem McDonald, MD

Clem McDonald

Role:

U.S. Core Data for Interoperability Task Force 2018, Member
Interoperability Standards Priorities Task Force 2018, Member
U.S. Core Data for Interoperability Task Force 2019, Member
U.S. Core Data for Interoperability Task Force 2021, Member
Public Health Data Systems Task Force 2021, Member
Interoperability Standards Priorities Task Force 2021, Member
Adopted Standards Task Force 2022, Member
HTI-1 Proposed Rule Task Force 2023, Member

Chief Health Data Standards Officer
National Library of Medicine

HITAC Member Terms:
Term 1: 1/2018 – 12/2020
Term 2: 1/2021 – 12/2023

Dr. McDonald is the Chief Health Data Standards Officer of the National Library of Medicine/NIH. For the previous 12 years, Dr. McDonald served as Director of the Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications (LHNCBC) and Scientific Director of its intramural research program.

His research focuses on electronic medical records (EMRs), their use in clinical care and research, the data standards needed to feed EMRs and epidemiologic studies of the clinical databases. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, and has published more than 300 papers that have garnered 18 thousand citations. Prior to coming to NLM, Dr. McDonald served as the a distinguished Professor of Medicine and of Medical Informatics at the Indiana University School of Medicine and the Director of the Regenstrief Institute for Health Care, a privately endowed research institute tied to Indiana University.

Dr. McDonald developed the Regenstrief Medical Record, one of the first electronic health record (EHR) systems, and introduced the first use of decision support in randomized trials of health information systems in a 1976 study (McDonald, 1976). He and his colleagues developed the first U.S. Health Information Exchange (HIE) which was the model for the many HIEs that followed, and which now carries 6 billion results from hospitals across Indiana. He developed the Logical Observation Identifier Names and Codes (LOINC) database to provide universal identifiers for clinical observations, was coauthor of the UCUM standard for computable units of measure, one of the founders and authors of the Health Level 7 (HL7) standard and a major contributor to the genomics reporting chapter of the 2018  V2 laboratory Results message. He is active in the development of the FHIR genomics reporting standard, and FHIR input forms development (Questionnaire and Structured Data Capture) and has developed web-based software tools to generate executable web forms and clinical flowsheets.