health information technology - supporting joint readiness · 1 health information technology -...
TRANSCRIPT
1
Health Information Technology - SupportingJoint Readiness
Session # 104, March 7, 2018
Mr. T. Pat Flanders, DADIO/J-6, CIO
Kevin P. Seeley, Deputy CIO, Colonel, USAF, MSC
2
Speaker Introduction“Pat” Flanders
Deputy Assistant Director Information Operations (DADIO)
and Chief Information Officer (CIO)
Defense Health Agency (DHA)
Mr. Flanders provides leadership for the continued development of an affordable, innovative, robust, and secure information technology environment in support of the Military Health System (MHS). Mr. Flanders is a computer scientist and Department of Defense (DoD) certified acquisition professional with 29 years of system automation, personnel, finance, and logistics experience.
3
Speaker IntroductionKevin P. Seeley, Colonel, USAF, MSC
Deputy CIO (DADIO & J-6)
DHA
Leads the J-6 Combat Support Directorate responsible for cybersecurity, emerging technologies, data and infrastructure standardization, functional integration, health informatics, clinical/business applications to operate and maintain the Military Health System (MHS) mission for 699 Military Treatment Facilities (MTFs) worldwide. Colonel Seeley holds a Health Executive Leader certificate from the University of California, San Diego, is a member of the American College of Health Executives (ACHE), and is a Certified Professional with the Health Information & Management Systems Society (HIMSS).
4
Conflict of Interest
Mr. T. Pat Flanders and Colonel Kevin Seeley have no real or apparent
conflicts of interest to report.
5
Agenda
• DADIO/J-6 Organizational Overview
• Shift to Standardized Services
• Cybersecurity – Everyone’s Business
• Summary/Questions
6
Learning Objectives
• Describe the important changes, direction, and benefits of the DHAIO/J-6 services
• Discuss how DADIO/J-6 ensures the right information is accessible to the right customers at the right time and in the right way
• Explain how DADIO/J-6 is facilitating partnerships amongst the Services, DHA, and Combatant Commands via the implementation and sustainment of an integrated and protected health IT environment
7
Organizational Overview
8
DADIO/ J-6
Our MissionImplement, manage, and sustain an integrated
and protected medical information enterprise to
ensure the right information is accessible to
the right customer at the right time and in the
right way
Our VisionA premier system of health IT,
enabling integrated healthcare
delivery for those who service in
the defense of our country
Standardizing and Optimizing IT as an Enterprise Support Activity
The DADIO Shared Services model organizes support and functions to
optimize delivery of reliable, flexible, and cost effective services to
customers
9
Goals and Approaches
• Maintain accountability to Services’ Requirements
• Communicate effectively and transparently with all Stakeholders
• Increase awareness of DADIO’s value
Deliver Trusted IT Services
• Reward excellence and innovation
• Build skills and expertise
• Empower people to make decisions
• Foster inclusion and diversity
Invest in our People
• Standardize IT processes and service offerings
• Enable joint readiness across the MHS
• Collaborate on all projects
Optimize IT Operations
As-Is: Fragmented IT Urban Sprawl
Managing the Full-Spectrum Internet of Things (IoT) in Healthcare
12
Shifting to Standardized Services
Portfolio Rationalization & Reform Model
MHS GENESIS
Strategic Integration:
Standardize/Consolidate
Desktop-to-Datacenter (D2D)
Reduce Variance –“One” Joint Health IT System
• “One Network” – identity & enterprise management, active directory
• “One Electronic Health Record (EHR)” – new single integrated EHR platform
• “One Email – everyone on same email system
• “One Datacenter – single datacenter hosting strategy
• “One Desktop” – standard secure baseline configuration/image
• “One Entry Point for Service” – unified help desk capability
• “One End user device (EUD) Refresh Service” – desktop, laptop
• “One AV/Comm” – single AV/communications strategy
• “One e-Learning” – single shared e-Learning platform
• “One analytics platform” – common clinical and business big data service
• Eventually – “One video tele-conference (VTC), virtual/telemedicine system, wireless (WiFi), voice over IP (VoiP), Medical Device strategy
Medical Community of Interest Network
To-Be: Joint Strategic Enabler
18
EHR Modernization
• Inpatient•Artifacts
•Outpatient•ADT Backbone
CHCS AHLTA
EssentrisHAIMS
Current EHR Future EHR
2017
Initial Deployment
2022
Full Deployment
Transition Risk
19
Data Modernization
• Master data management
• Data governance
• Legacy data
• Service oriented architecture
• Enterprise intelligence & data
solutions PMO
20
Cybersecurity
Healthcare Cyber Attacks Everyone’s Issue
DHA Risk Management Framework (RMF)
23
Summary
24
Implementing National Defense Act 2017
• Future being constructed
– March 2018: Final report to Congress
– October 2018: Start implementation
• Assessing regional models
• CIO stood-up first Regional Information Office
– National Capital Region
– Identifying:
• Roles/Responsibilities
• Skill sets
• Required process and procedures
25
Benefits • Consolidating and optimizing MHS infrastructure delivers a
single, secure, interoperable infrastructure for DoD
healthcare communications and IT operations
– Replaces duplicative Service Medical networks
– Reduces overall network maintenance costs
– Enables standardization of clinical/business processes
– Provides robust, secure and highly available service
– Improves access to healthcare information Promotes
effective, efficient health operations
26
Questions• For additional questions, please contact us at
• Don’t forget to complete the online session evaluations