CIO Roundtable: How To Navigate The Healthcare MazeCIO Roundtable: How To Navigate The Healthcare Maze

Our brain trust of eight leading healthcare CIOs offers insights on Meaningful Use, accountable care, clinical analytics, and BOYD.

Neil Versel, Contributor

July 26, 2012

3 Min Read
information logo in a gray background | information

information Healthcare - August 2012

information Healthcare - August 2012


information Green

information Green

Download the entire August 2012 issue of information Healthcare, distributed in an all-digital format as part of our Green Initiative
(Registration required.)


CIO Roundtable

CIO Roundtable

We're clearly at a pivotal juncture in health IT. Federal policy makers are finalizing requirements for Stage 2 of the $27 billion incentive program for Meaningful Use of electronic health records. Healthcare organizations are struggling to put ICD-10 coding in place, and many providers are worrying about whether accountable care and pay for performance are here to stay.

The upcoming national elections may influence some of these issues, but no matter how the elections play out, providers will have to manage, secure, and make interoperable huge stores of data from internal and external EHRs and, soon, genetic profiles. Taken together, these factors make for a busy time for healthcare CIOs.

To find out how healthcare providers are tackling those and other challenges, information Healthcare recently gathered eight leading IT executives at its New York City offices. Our CIO Roundtable covered a wide range of topics, including obstacles to Stage 2 MU, outcomes-based reimbursement, BYOD policies, advanced clinical analytics, clinical decision support, the role of IT in population health surveillance, and strategies to recruit and retain IT talent.

Our panel comprised:

>> Rebecca Armato, executive director, physician and interoperability services, Huntington Hospital, Pasadena, Calif.

>> George Brenckle, CIO, UMass Memorial Medical Center, Worcester, Mass.

>> Gary Christensen, CIO and chief operating officer, Rhode Island Quality Institute, Providence, R.I. The institute serves as a Beacon Community, Regional Extension Center, and health information exchange.

>> Dan Drawbaugh, CIO, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh.

>> Mark Hulse, CIO, H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute, Tampa, Fla.

>> Stephanie Reel, CIO, Johns Hopkins University and Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore.

>> Michael Restuccia, CIO, University of Pennsylvania Health System, Philadelphia.

>> Larry Stofko, executive VP, The Innovation Institute, St. Joseph Health System, Laguna Beach, Calif. Stofko is the former CIO of the Orange, Calif.-based health system.

What follows are excerpts from that three-hour discussion.

To read the rest of the article,
Download the August 2012 issue of information Healthcare

Research: 2012 Healthcare CIO 25 information Healthcare's second annual compilation of IT executives highlights the exceptional thinkers and doers, the visionaries and the innovators who are moving patient care forward. It's free with registration.

Get This And All Our Reports


Read more about:

20122012

About the Author

Neil Versel

Contributor

Neil Versel is a journalist specializing in health IT, mobile health, patient safety, quality of care & the business of healthcare. He’s also a board member of @HealtheVillages.

Never Miss a Beat: Get a snapshot of the issues affecting the IT industry straight to your inbox.

You May Also Like


More Insights