Paul was a panelist at this lively and important health informatics event. To report on the conference and the health informatics sector in general, we posed the following list of questions to Paul, to be answered in a series of blog entries over the coming two weeks. The intent is to communicate a vision to add to the conversation going on about this critical sector. We welcome your comments as well.
Questions:
Paul, can you answer the following questions based on the discussions and presentations at the June 19, 2006 Gardiner Roberts LLP conference on Health Informatics, which you attended?
1. There are some givens, for example we know that:
· “The health system” is a misnomer—there are really islands of automation and function; the system as a whole is quite dysfunctional.
· Strong project management skills are missing in the sector—there are too many inexperienced people in the industry (“kids buying servers as though they were Xboxes”).
· There is a real lack of trained professionals in the field.
· There is a supernal structure that does not lead to anything. Are those huge structural elements being invested at the expense of people and skills?
· Vendors do not play together; it is not in their interest.
· $10 – $15 billion has to be spent on health informatics in
· Organizations are not investing in people with soft skills.
These ideas point to a lack of coherent strategy. What strategic vision could you start to sketch out to deal with these related issues? What project management capabilities would be required for an investment of that magnitude and complexity?
2. You were the first CIO of Canada. If you were offered a similar portfolio for the health care sector in
6. Could you sketch out the project management skills that hospital-based HI professionals should be bringing to their work? What would the soft and hard skills be? Would you include clinical skills, industrial and management engineering?
7. How would you foster leadership from clinicians, CEOs, support staff and administration staff, integrating their efforts to achieve critical results?
8. How are we going to relate to technology optimists or pessimists in health care?
9. There is not a cohesive health informatics strategy for the