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Mostashari hails new health IT workforce

June 27, 2011 | Healthcare IT News Staff

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WASHINGTON – Farzad Mostashari, MD, the nation's healthcare IT chief, pronounced the graduates of a new health information technology program at Columbia University and Weill Cornell Medical College to be leaders in a healthcare movement that's critical to the nation, as he addressed the graduating class on June 24.

Mostashari, the national coordinator for health information technology, saluted the graduates for being a part of an innovative program aimed at using modern data technology to dramatically improve the U.S. healthcare system.

[See also: HIMSS partners with ONC to help health IT grads.]

The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC), part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, is responsible for $2 billion of funds to implement a variety of programs including the development health professionals across the nation to support doctors, hospitals and other providers with health IT tools and skills.

“You are now leaders in a movement that is crucial for the future of healthcare and the future of our nation,” Mostashari told the first class of graduates of a new program sponsored by Columbia University and its partner Cornell University. “Information technology will be transformative for healthcare in America, and it will demand a new workforce with leaders who come from university programs like this one.”

With 77 graduates today, the Columbia/Cornell program is one of nine new University Based Training (UBT) programs throughout the nation that will be graduating some 500 students this summer. 

[See also: Health IT No. 1 on list of top 10 'hot' careers.]

In addition to the Columbia/Cornell program, the program grantees include:

  • Duke University, in partnership with the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
  • George Washington University
  • Indiana University
  • Johns Hopkins University
  • Oregon Health and Science University
  • Texas State University, in partnership with the University of Texas at Austin and Houston
  • University of Colorado at Denver College of Nursing
  • University of Minnesota, in partnership with the College of St. Scholastica

The nine UBT programs were launched last year with a total $32 million in American Recovery and Reinvestment Funds from ONC. 

The university programs are designed to provide high-level health IT skills to mid-career individuals who are advanced in the health or IT fields.  UBT program graduates will provide leadership in using and developing health IT tools, with each student focusing on one of six key roles: clinician or public health leader; health information management and exchange specialist; health information privacy and security specialist; research and development scientist; programmer and software engineer; and health IT sub-specialist.

Other Workforce Development Programs launched with ONC support include: consortia of 82 community colleges offering programs to provide six-month training courses for as many as 10,500 students each year, development of curricula and education materials by five universities for the community college program, and development of related health IT competency exams.

Related Topics:
  • Columbia University
  • Columbia University
  • Cornell
  • Farzad Mostashari
  • Meaningful Use
  • U.S. healthcare
  • Washington
  • Weill Cornell Medical College
  • Electronic Health Records
  • Policy and Legislation
  • Quality and Safety

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