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Governor Phil Breseden of Tennessee urged simplicity in the march towards advancing eHealth initiatives nationally during his keynote address at the HIMSS 2007 conference in New Orleans today. Breseden is the co-chair of the National Governor Association’s (NGA) national eHealth Alliance and is deeply involved in a number of initiatives to drive state health IT efforts. Though he claimed to be no expert on eHealth matters, he said his main goal in addressing HIMSS members was to challenge them “to simplify.” Breseden said that he believes that healthcare is still very much a “cottage industry” which must be updated, and that if we don’t act, it will “bite us as an industry.” “We’ve gotten ourselves in the complexity business which is never a good thing,” he declared, and urged common ground so that more progress is made with less discussion of all of the countless technologies, initiatives, and grants that bog us down. If we can tackle eHealth implementation in this country, he said, we may be better prepared to deal with other difficult challenges we have yet to face in the U.S. Generally, Breseden believes there is a need for a system that is focused on individuals and that is far less fragmented and much more centralization. Another crucial step is to begin altering the economics surrounding healthcare, he said. If we can accomplish these general things we’ll be able to “move eHealth out of the lab and into the real world,” he said. Breseden offered three concrete ways to accomplish these goals:
Last Updated ( Thu, Mar 01 2007 )
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