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The changing face of the healthcare CIO | AI reporter’s notebook | Partner news

Wednesday, September 4, 2024
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Healthcare CIO on the job

Today’s healthcare CIO: Enterprise strategist or technology tactician?

A new survey shows that, in the generative AI era, two of every three U.S. hospitals let the CIO’s office handle the selection and acquisition of data analytics platforms.

In the rest, almost a third of the field, these duties are performed by decentralized business partners who do not report to the CIO.

The Harris Poll conducted the survey on behalf of data platform supplier Arcadia. The team received responses from 102 senior healthcare leaders or decision makers in IT.

Most healthcare CIOs are leading or influencing strategy at their organization, the authors of the survey report write. They note that almost 9 of 10 (87%) would describe the current role of the CIO at their organization as either a strategy influencer (47%) or a strategy leader (40%). 

This suggests the “heavy involvement” of healthcare CIOs in “setting, refining and executing business strategy, whether set by themselves or others,” the authors write. 

At the same time, they point out, many healthcare CIOs are involved in day-to-day operations:

‘While the role of [healthcare] CIO may be seen as more strategic, many IT decision-makers (58%) feel that CIOs are primarily centered around tactical execution currently, with an emphasis on day-to-day operations rather than long-term strategic development.’

Here are three key findings from the report, which Arcadia released Sept. 4. 

1. The vast majority of IT decision-makers in healthcare see the role of AI as very important or even vital in their organization currently—and even more so in the next five years. 

These leaders “admit feeling pressure from all sides to implement AI,” the authors note. “They largely see AI as a way to analyze large patient data sets to identify trends and create population health intervention strategies and analyze individual patient data.” More: 

‘Healthcare IT leaders expect to see shifts in the skills and expertise that healthcare organizations need. But they see these technological shifts as opportunities for current employees to spend less time on mundane tasks and more time on intricate skill-building.’ 

2. Most healthcare CIOs are leading or influencing strategy at their organization, and their level of strategic influence is only expected to grow. 

However, the authors add, CIOs are also heavily involved in day-to-day operations, with most leaders reporting that CIOs’ roles are primarily centered around tactical execution currently, with an emphasis on the day-to-day operations rather than long-term strategic development. 

‘Further, technical teams spend most of their time on tactical tasks and as a result struggle to contribute strategically to the organization.’

3. Healthcare IT decision-makers consider tech-related business priorities among their organization’s top priorities. 

In regards to an enterprise data analytics platform, most of these leaders identify elements like robust security and governance controls, minimized latency and real-time access to be very important elements for such a platform. However, not many report that their current platform supports these elements, the authors remark. 

‘While these leaders overwhelmingly agree that organizations that effectively harness data are better equipped to remain competitive and resilient, they recognize that communication between IT teams and clinical staff is often the biggest hurdle in implementing new tech.’

Download the report here

 

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AI in healthcare

Industry Watcher’s Digest

Buzzworthy developments of the past few days.

  • An HHS agency is developing ways to keep aging AI-enabled medical devices up to snuff for the long haul. The Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health, or “ARPA-H,” says it will conduct the work through its Precise-AI program. Precise here stands for Performance and Reliability Evaluation for Continuous Modifications and Useability of Artificial Intelligence. The program will come up with mechanisms for not just detecting problems but automatically fixing them too. It will also create alerts of impending trouble for clinicians, AI developers, hospital administrators and regulators. Details here
     
  • Generative AI can drown its users in a firehose of unhelpful information. Tim O’Connell, MD, offers the vivid word picture by way of cheering the advance of “medical grade” AI in MedCity News. He also calls for starving black-box tools by feeding only transparent algorithms. “What clinicians want and need is information at the point of care that is accurate, concise and verifiable,” writes O’Connell, a healthcare AI entrepreneur and clinical informatics academician. “Medical AI has the ability now to meet these requirements while safeguarding patient data, helping to improve outcomes and reducing clinician burnout.” Read the rest
     
  • Patients need to know not just how AI is being used but also why. At times the latter might include leveling with them in a spirit of unprecedented transparency. Maybe even saying something along the lines of: “Because AI will help us improve not only your care but also our efficiency, productivity and financial health.” Columbia University bioethicist David Hoffman, JD, comes close to suggesting as much in a video interview with Marianne Kolbasuk McGee of BankInfoSecurity. “When we talk about AI influence on medical devices and treatment,” Hoffman adds, “we haven’t yet defined what we can reliably represent to patients as safe. And so we can’t make a judgment about whether that [AI’s] safety is sufficient to justify whatever positive effect [it] can produce.” View the video.
     
  • Africa is bursting with biodiversity. A native researcher is using AI to screen the vast greeneries for potential remedies. “Traditional drug discovery involves understanding the structure of proteins in the human body or in a pathogen and painstakingly identifying molecules that can bind with or interact with them in desirable ways,” explains the scientist, Fidele Ntie-Kang, an associate professor of pharmaceutical chemistry at the University of Buea in Cameroon. “Machine learning and AI allow us to dramatically short circuit this process.” Learn more in a Q&A published by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance. 
     
  • Aidoc makes the list. So does Zebra Medical Vision. There are only three more in Analytics Insight’s picks for the top five healthcare companies using AI for diagnosis. Take three guesses and then click here to see how many you got right. 
     
  • Startup founder Tina John of Avira Health took home top honors in an innovation challenge. Avira helps postpartum mothers start their motherhood journeys with know-how and confidence. John was awarded $10,000 by the event sponsor, CharmHealth. Categories included hardware accelerated AI, generative AI and tech-led innovations. More here
     
  • The Australian government has found generative AI ‘worse than humans in every way’ at summarizing documents. Worse yet, far from reducing burnout, it “might actually create additional work for people.” The coverage is from an Aussie independent outlet called Crikey. Where has it been all my life?  
     
  • Recent research in the news: 
     
  • AI funding news of note:
     
  • From AIin.Healthcare’s news partners:
     

 

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