Shortage of Health-IT Workers Is Limiting Progress


Author: Neil Versel

BRISBANE, Australia — The warnings are nothing new: there’s a nursing shortage, family medicine is dying, demand for long-term care is soaring. But if health-IT is to fulfill its potential in helping to address these challenges, the need for informatics professionals in healthcare is only going to grow, and not just in the United States.

“It’s clear that this is a limiting factor in the development of eHealth programs,” said Swiss physician Antoine Geissbuhler, liaison from the International Medical Informatics Association (IMIA) to the World Health Organization (WHO), as the two bodies announced a new collaboration.

With health-IT leaders from all over the world gathered in Australia last week for MedInfo 2007, representatives of IMIA and the WHO said they would collaborate over at least the next three years to develop a global health informatics workforce.

They also said they would promote the Global Observatory for eHealth and the sharing of intellectual property. The Global Observatory for eHealth, established in 2005, is kind of a clearinghouse for best practices, “to better understand the eHealth space in countries around the world,” according to WHO eHealth coordinator S. Yunkap Kwankam.

In emphasizing workforce development, Kwankam, a U.S.-educated native of Cameroon, talked of a “growing know-do gap,” which he described as “the gulf between what’s known in science and what we actually do in medicine and practice.”

Kwankam said that health-IT, and more specifically, knowledge delivered to the point of care, can help bridge that gap. He noted that the 8,000 worldwide employees of the WHO can’t possibly serve the health needs of 6 billion people, so global health depends on an informed populace.

“I believe: arm the individual with information and we’ll have a revolution,” Kwankam said. In the digital age, the supplier of arms will be legions of informatics pros and other knowledge workers. “Access to care had been dependent on face-to-face contact. We don’t have to have that anymore,” said Kwankam.

Geissbuhler, chief of medical informatics at Hôpitaux Universitaires de Gèneve in Switzerland, said that IMIA is interested in the “10x10” effort of the American Medical Informatics Association (AMIA), in which the U.S. affiliate of IMIA seeks to train 10,000 health-IT professionals by 2010.

However, AMIA chief executive Don Detmer, also in Brisbane, noted, “The global issues are different in a lot of ways.”

Geissbuhler acknowledged that the issue internationally is more than just training, but also of brain drain, as migration of informatics professionals to places like the U.S., Western Europe, and Japan threatens health-IT progress in developing countries.

Want to read more expert articles like this? Click here to subscribe to Digital HealthCare & Productivity.

Click here to log in.

0 Comments

Add Comment

Text Only 2000 character limit

Page 1 of 1

White Papers & Special Reports

thomson reuters image
Biomarkers: An Indispensible Addition to the Drug Development Toolkit
Examining the Potential of Biomarkers
Sponsored by Thomson Reuters

Biomarkers are becoming an essential part of clinical development. In this white paper, Thomson Reuters provides insight from experts in industry and academia, and explores the role of biomarkers as evaluative tools in improving clinical research and the challenges this presents.

Discover the potential of biomarkers to:

  • Improve decision making
  • Accelerate drug development
  • Reduce development costs


BlueArc_Scientific Data
Scientific Data Lifecycle Management: Preparing for Storage in an Uncertain Future
Sponsored by BlueArc

Managing vast and overwhelming streams of gene sequencing data today requires ultra-high performance systems and processes. With continued rapid advancement and improvements in gene sequencing, expect tomorrow’s instruments to output quantities of genomic information that will dwarf current levels. Help your organization maintain data control and prepare for the future of sequencing through this informative paper that discusses:

  • The information technology challenges of gene sequencing
  • “Intelligent” methods for data management and customization
  • System survival tips... Deciding what data to keep or delete
  • New tools to keep scientists ahead of impending data torrents


SAS Managed image
Managed Innovation, Assured Compliance
Developing, executing and managing the transformation, analysis and submission of clinical research data with SAS® Drug Development
Sponsored by SAS
Get better products to market faster. Download this white paper to discover the top ten challenges facing life science executives and how to overcome them. See how SAS Drug Development transforms clinical data into true innovation.


Life Science Webcasts & Podcasts

Presented by Trade Commission of Spain

Spain Biotech: An Engine for Economic Change 

TCS podcastDiscover how Spain is focusing on biotechnology to be an engine for economic change through gradual internationalization, development and technology transfer.

Regional governments are actively investing in public and private biology research and promoting the creation of knowledge-based companies. Spain’s human capital combined with aggressive investment in biotech research and infrastructure has led to the creation of bio-clusters.

Today, there are nearly 700 Spanish companies engaged in biotechnology, with almost 50 percent growth in funding devoted to research. In fact, spending on internal R & D in biotechnology has grown 46 percent and is close to 300 million Euros.

Access the podcast 

 



More Podcasts

Job Openings

saic_logo

MANAGER, SCIENTIFIC COMPUTING & PROGRAMMING
(Bioinformatics Manager)
SAIC-Frederick, Inc has an exciting opportunity for a Manager, Scientific Computing & Programming - Core Genoytyping Facility in Gaithersburg, Maryland.  In this role, you will lead the Bioinformatics & Analysis Group.
Master’s or equivalent required.  PhD preferred. Six years experience in development of scientific programs in high-performance computing environment including five years supporting scientific research in computational chemistry, biology, or genetics, & two years supervisory experience.  View complete job posting & apply: www.saic-frederick.com. Position #146945.

For reprints and/or copyright permission, please contact The YGS Group, 1808 Colonial Village Lane, Lancaster, PA;

(717) 399-1900 ext. 125, or via email to Ashley.Zander@theYGSgroup.com.