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JULY / AUGUST 2006 FEATURES Lausanne program gathers leaders to discuss technology and other innovations impacting health care Health care leaders from across Europe assembled in Switzerland for “Mastering the New Challenges of Health Care,” a five-day executive education course held in May by the Institute for Health Economics and Management of University of Lausanne in conjunction with HMI. The third offering of this annual program examined the current issues facing health care institutions around the world, with the goal of equipping participants with the essential knowledge and skills necessary to navigate their own organizations through change in the wake of shifting economic, social, and political dynamics.
The program’s participants hailed from health care organizations in countries throughout Europe, including Spain, the United Kingdom, Slovakia, Romania, and Portugal, and represented a wide range of backgrounds and leadership positions in both the public and private sectors. Encouraging interaction and collaboration among participants and the opportunity to share experiences and knowledge with others, the program featured daily study groups that allowed participants to meet in small groups to construct strategies for an ideal health care system. On the final day of the course the groups shared their ideas with one another.
Globally, the strategic implementation of information technology in health care continues to command attention, and accordingly, the course featured this topic prominently in both lectures and group discussion. Shore said participants’ responses were especially strong to a two-part session titled “The Future of Health Care IT,” led by John D. Halamka, MD, MS, chief information officer and associate dean for educational technology at Harvard Medical School. Halamka discussed efforts to introduce web-based tools that connect patients and providers in the U.S., while helping to enhance quality and reduce error, provide patients with better access to information, and minimize administrative costs for health care organizations. The discussions specifically examined the use of electronic health records, including ePrescribing, and the use of personal health records and web visits. Halamka, said Shore, “is on the leading edge of the developments in this technology as it applies to health care.” He added that participants were impressed with Halamka’s demonstrations of these new technologies and said they hoped to see implementation of similar systems in Europe.
Copyright 2006 Harvard Medical International |
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