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About Health Care
At the Jan. 11, 2011 WSJ health blog, in an article entitled "JP Morgan Healthcare: Google’s Schmidt on Open Source and Health IT", Google CEO Eric Schmidt is cited as saying:
First, a comment on language, which perhaps I should more accurately describe as a critique of IT culture:
“A platform like that?”
As at my post "Does the CEO of Google Use Google? - And: Platform, Platform, Who's Got The Platform?" early last year Schmidt also said –
At that post I also pointed out that the successful practice of medicine is not a 'platform database' or any other reductionistic information retrieval problem, and that such a "platform opportunity" was seized upon decades ago:
I note that IT personnel like to refer to “platforms”, “solutions” – a rather presumptuous term – “paradigms”, and other buzzwords to mask the fact that what they’re referring to are more commonly known as “hardware” and “software” and arrangements thereof.
It is a word that implies lack of knowledge about the complexities and realities of medicine – including that health IT problems will not be solved via a “platform.”
I wrote more on “platformania” at this link.
I do agree strongly with Schmidt on the following from the recent WSJ posting:
That's been done, too, as in the OpenVista /WorldVista efforts.
I merely add that an erroneous approach to "focusing on the patients" (and the clinicians using the IT, i.e., a user-centric approach in the terminology of Social Informatics) will have results just as suboptimal as the current designer-centric approach to health IT. Designing health IT that "focuses on the patients" and that eliminates unintended consequences - i.e., "doing health IT well" - is wickedly harder than it sounds.
Most importantly with regards to Mr. Schmidt's most recent thoughts on academia:
The National Research Council did study a number of the best academic centers and in a 2009 report found quite clearly that even there, “Current Approaches to U.S. Health Care Information Technology are Insufficient.” See http://www8.nationalacademies.org/onpinews/newsitem.aspx?RecordID=12572
They did recommend the solution, and it's not a "platform":
That means forgoing the current national rush to EHR, which is decidedly a medical experiment without patient consent.
In any case, I am impressed that a major information technology CEO has recommended a patient centered approach to health IT, agile methodologies, open source, etc. - true sacrilege towards today's health IT ecosystem.
(Note to Google and Mr. Schmidt: In "Who Can Solve Healthcare IT's Challenges? Part 1 - Google" I wrote that:
Google, I am available should you seek true competitive advantage, and avoidance of paths that lead to health care IT failure such as you once attempted here. However, somehow I am sure your HR department would probably find my sometimes "edgy", critical-thinking approach to matters of national import "disruptive."
Disruptive to what, exactly, I'm not sure, but disruptive to - something - is good enough in today's "PC", outcomes-be-damned corporate culture.)
-- SS