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The 10 challenges in Health IT in the coming years

The 10 challenges in Health IT in the coming years. H. Stephen Lieber HIMSS President & CEO. Worldwide Themes. Cost: Europe, Asia, North America, Middle East all say the same: too high Quality: Again, all say the same: too low

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The 10 challenges in Health IT in the coming years

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  1. The 10 challenges in Health IT in the coming years H. Stephen Lieber HIMSS President & CEO

  2. Worldwide Themes • Cost: Europe, Asia, North America, Middle East all say the same: too high • Quality: Again, all say the same: too low • Access: patient access to care is uneven and at time unequal regardless of delivery or payment system

  3. Trend 1: Cost • Global challenge • OECD: less than 20 percent of the world’s population, but spend 90 percent of the world’s resources on health • In US, 16.7% of gross domestic product on healthcare ($2,000,000,000,000)

  4. Trend 2: Aging and Specialisation • Today: 8% of world’s popoulation over 65 • 2030: 12% will be over 65 • With age, chronic diseases increase • With longer life, more costs

  5. Trend 3: Consumerism • Shift of focus from process to the patient • PHR is just one example of consumer involvement • patient support and education materials, as well as the clinician-sourced information, will be both expected and demanded by patients

  6. Trend 4: Workflow Improvement • E-H-R = less time on administrative tasks and more time for direct patient care • Even with technology, the world will continue to require more doctors and nurses • Caregivers must be involved in the process to integrate technology into every patient-care scenario

  7. Trend 5: Medical Home • Medical Home: place of ongoing care and consistent care givers • Healthcare costs could decrease by 5.6 percent if all patients had a medical home

  8. Trend 6:EMRQuality • HIMSS Analytics: Electronic Medical Record adoption progress correlates to the quality of care • Size not a requirement for IT adoption or improved quality • Quality solutions: coordination of care among providers and computerized test results

  9. Trend 7: Internet Use • Some 1.4 billion people worldwide use the Internet • 4.5 percent of all Internet searches are for health-related information • healthcare organizations have introduced patient portals

  10. Trend 8: Mobile Devices • Telemedicine, as clinicians use this technology for remote diagnosis • Quality healthcare demands a local approach • Practical applications using open source software and SMS/MMS telereferrals, a simplified technology

  11. Trend 9: Human Genome • Learn more about the cause and treatment of disease, and how each person reacts • Healthcare delivery will evolve from reactive to proactive medicine • Electronic health records, clinical databases and all knowledge bases must operate with interoperability

  12. Trend 10: Standards • Development and adoption of universal health IT standards • Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise, or IHE, is a global initiative managed by healthcare professionals and industry

  13. Conclusions • Collaboration • IT strategic planning • Interoperability brings global healthcare together

  14. May 5-7, 2009—Manama, Bahrain—www.himssME.org/09

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