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health technology is where?

Chris Ridgeway | 21 Mar 2010 | 21:55

Here’s the thing. I’m still the same political nerd I’ve always been, and while others are updating their brackets (poor Kansas) between commercial breaks, I’ve got my TV tuned to exciting late-night coverage by: C-SPAN. What could be more exciting than political 3-pointers (“kill this bill!”) tossed in buzzer-beating fashion (“The gentleman’s time is expired!”)?

So, it’s Sunday Night Congress for me… in another sports season it would probably include a theme song by a blonde country diva and maybe some rotating 3-dimensional logos.

And without getting into the real politics of the thing (full disclosure: I tentatively support the majority, especially disbelieving that we are somehow snapping the constitution in half with Marxist hands… but still concerned that the total bill as presented is marred by the process so much that it isn’t close to a great solution)… I have another more basic question.

Where is the part of health care reform bill that promotes and enforces digital health care information?

This was one of my favorite parts of Obama talking about reform as a candidate. He identified the problem with the antiquated information systems used by hospitals, and the lack of a common standard that allowed your medical record to be instantly and seamlessly accessible to any health care organization in the country.

The Recovery Act included money for this, but (and here I’m speaking from memory), not necessarily centralized standards and not tons of regulation.  Honestly, the best solution would be to create a robust central standard equivalent to IEEE anything… and then let private companies hack at that to create software packages that are usable, robust, and can interact with the standard.  This article, however, argues that more stringent oversight is needed because of potential safety issues in data management (“whoops, didn’t know she was taking THAT drug!  Did it just not show up on my screen?”).  Still, I’m a little more economically conservative on this one, thinking that competition between software houses is the best way to go:  you’ll get faster implementation of new features.

The single standard is important, because even if forward thinking doctors offices adopt new technologies now, if they can’t share with the hospital down the street, we’re giving up most of the benefit:  like the Personal Computer vs. the Internet.

But the key barriers are probably the practical ones.  When I did IT consulting for a large health system in Illinois, I discovered exactly what this article points out.

  1. Doctors, especially older ones, can be surprisingly curmudgeonly about technology.  I realize this is a general overstatement, but even if it’s true for a few key doctors, it screws the whole thing up.  Plus, I’ve sat personally in doctors office trying to teach them how to use Microsoft Exchange… phew.  That’s tough work.
  2. Hospital IT departments have the tendency to be staffed by… well, let’s say the system I worked for was mostly flowered-turtle-neck middle-aged women who didn’t know an API from a power supply.  A whole department of them attempting to support 4,000 employees. This is not a sexist thing, though I might be a little bit age-ist.  Seriously.  Hospitals need to hire some nerdy kids straight out of school, and fast.

Okay, rambling point done.

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how blogging is hard when your rhythms are off

Chris Ridgeway | 12 Mar 2010 | 11:11

Some might have noticed that I just got my new domain www.theodigital.com sorta off the ground and then subsequently stopped talking. Phew. It’s been the craziness of life: mainly my transition to my new job in Orlando Florida from Chicago. I haven’t had a “normal” day in 3+ months, in fact, I realized that I had lived out of suitcase from 20 December until yesterday, when I slept in my new apartment for the first time. It’s been hotels and guest rooms for three months. Yowza.

So even though my new place is trashed with partly-opened cardboard boxes, it feels good to land a little bit.

Meanwhile, my e-mail inbox is full of “tips” from friends and readers on theo-digital type topics. All stuff I’d love to think and write about… and mostly stuff that will probably still wait for a bit. Some things still need to happen. For instance, living normally will still required that I buy some things. Like milk. And a bed.

I’ve been telling people for the last few years that e-mail inboxes have become the to-do list manager of the active person, and it’s true. Funny how media fill prior functions/needs. For me, e-mail is both “To-Do” and—since Google’s ability to archive everything—also “Life History.” That first one is why I can be slow to return e-mails. If I’m in a mode where I can’t “do anything else right now”—even short messages become shoved aside and sometimes forgotten.

On the other hand, you can text me and you’re likely to get an instant response. Media-shifting (from phone to text to e-mail to face-to-face) doesn’t just repackage the same message, it seems to modify it completely.

Okay, off to Ikea.

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About Me

Chris Ridgeway

Retro-identity idea: define yourself by magazines. Me? Wired. Paste. Atlantic Monthly. Discipleship Journal. Or this: For ten years I've worked as a leadership coach, spiritual director, and free agent missionary with Great Commission Ministries on its mission to reach the next generation--I currently serve as the national Staff Program Manager for GCM, helping train and equip church planters, campus missionaries , and other missional leaders. My area of curiosity is the impact of an information society on Christian theology, especially a doctrine of scripture. Does text messaging modify our view of the Trinity? Oh yeah, and I'm inexcusably addicted to breakfast diners. New home base: Orlando, FL. Home home: Chicago-ish.

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