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Healthcare IT to Create Thousands of New Job Opportunities for the Nation
| Healthcare IT News - Healthcare Informatics |
New workforce training initiative to be announced within weeks
As the nation moves from a paper to a digital healthcare system, a minimum of 50,000 new health information management job opportunities will be created, said David Blumenthal, MD, national coordinator for health information technology . He spoke about the government's plans for transforming healthcare into an industry of "meaningful users" of healthcare IT at the 81st annual American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) convention in Grapevine, Texas. "I know it's not going to be easy," he said. "We're going to need your help to bring this vision to reality."
Blumenthal announced a workforce training initiative that is going to be announced within weeks or months but didnt offer any details. Linda Kloss, AHIMA's CEO, said there is a network of 270 accredited programs for health information management. She said she hopes the federal government will look to expand the current network and avoid programs with no oversight that could "dead-end" people's careers. Kloss said AHIMA would be "very active" in making sure extension centers hire HIM professionals. "It's a natural fit that will take place," she said. Vice President of practice leadership -AHIMA, Don Mon said that workforce issue is tied in part to regional extension centers that the federal government would create. "What's really needed is things after that," he said. "What's really required is the HIM expertise."
Blumenthal called the legislation that provides $34 billion in incentives to encourage healthcare providers to adopt healthcare IT and show meaningful use "a brilliant piece of legislation." It focuses on outcomes, patient satisfaction and involving the family "rather than on the equipment we'll be using in pursuit of those goals," he said. "It seems hard at times to create initiatives," he said, adding that he envisions a day when, instead of a directive to urge healthcare providers to adopt IT, there will instead be a demand for it.
The government has allocated $70 million to start 70 regional centers, patterned after the cooperative extension centers developed to provide farmers with agricultural research and advice. The healthcare IT regional centers would provide physicians and other healthcare providers with help on the EHR front – not only with selection and implementation, but also with help using the systems.
Source: Healthcare IT News
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Healthcare IT to Create Thousands of New Job Opportunities for the Nation


