{"id":3883,"date":"2017-03-03T11:10:00","date_gmt":"2017-03-03T11:10:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/projects\/horsesforsources\/health-system-putting-patients-physicians-at-center-of-digital-healthcare_030317\/"},"modified":"2017-03-03T11:10:00","modified_gmt":"2017-03-03T11:10:00","slug":"health-system-putting-patients-physicians-at-center-of-digital-healthcare_030317","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.horsesforsources.com\/health-system-putting-patients-physicians-at-center-of-digital-healthcare_030317\/","title":{"rendered":"How One Health System is Putting Patients and Physicians at the Center of \u201cDigital\u201d Healthcare"},"content":{"rendered":"
A Different Take on HIMSS 2017 and Health IT<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n Technology was first and foremost on the minds of the over 42,000 people who gathered in Orlando for HIMSS2017 last week – or was it? And should it be? There is a groundswell rising at HIMSS for not just talking but acting when it comes to putting the individual—the person—at the center of healthcare. In a word: empathy. How does what you do with IT, or as an IT professional impact the way a person experiences healthcare throughout their lives? There is a lot of attention on security, cognitive computing, analytics, and so forth – the enablers of how healthcare can better serve its constituents. But at the end of the day, it’s about the people for whom you are designing these systems because if they can’t or won’t use them, it won’t impact health, medical, and financial outcomes. So an undercurrent of themes is swelling around social, behavioral, and environmental aspects of healthcare.<\/p>\n Effective healthcare IT systems need alignment and collaboration inside the hospital system—but need to also include what is outside of it<\/strong><\/p>\n After the conference, on the way back from the airport, I sat next to an IT project manager. She told me how she had coordinated across five hospitals in a system to prioritize a list of IT projects that would enable these hospitals to create an interoperable network to exchange data more effectively and enable communications. After the agreement, one hospital came back and said, no, we have a different priority this year. This is the real challenge in healthcare—not whether the technology will work because it can and it will—it’s about whether the people will work together to define and achieve common goals.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n