The alternative route: hanging out the unmentionables for better decision making in health information technology

Health Affairs
David C Kibbe, Curtis P McLaughlin

Abstract

Expert panels and policy analysts have often ignored potential contributions to health information technology (IT) from the Internet and Web-based applications. Perhaps they are among the "unmentionables" of health IT. Ignoring those unmentionables and relying on established industry experts has left us with a standards process that is complex and burdened by diverse goals, easy for entrenched interests to dominate, and reluctant to deal with potentially disruptive technologies. We need a health IT planning process that is more dynamic in its technological forecasting and inclusive of IT experts from outside the industry.

References

Jul 28, 2005·JAMA : the Journal of the American Medical Association·Andrew S Grove
Aug 21, 2008·Health Affairs·Carol C Diamond, Clay Shirky

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