Harvard prof will head health technology effort
The Obama administration today is announcing that Dr. David Blumenthal, a Harvard Medical professor who is director of the Institute for Health Policy at Massachusetts General Hospital, will be national coordinator for health information technology.
In his new post, he will be in charge of nearly $20 billion in the economic stimulus package to build health IT, including encouraging more doctors and hospitals to use computers.
"President Obama believes we must take serious steps to modernize our healthcare system in order to improve the health of all Americans, bring down costs, and ensure sustained long-term economic growth. Health information technology is a critical part of the President's strategy to reform our health care system and as one of the nation's leading health information technology experts, Dr. Blumenthal has the experience and the vision to help make this effort a reality," Jenny Backus, a spokeswoman for the Department of Health and Human Services, said in a statement.
"As a practicing physician and a leading scholar on health information technology, Dr. Blumenthal is uniquely qualified to help America's doctors, nurses, hospitals, and patients reap the benefits of a modernized health system. Dr. Blumenthal shares President Obama's commitment to investing in a health IT infrastructure that will protect patient privacy, and improve both quality and efficiency in our nation's health system."
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Elizabeth Cooney is a former
health reporter for the Worcester Telegram & Gazette, where she also was a
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books and journals at Little, Brown, and worked for Boston magazine.Boston Globe Health and Science staff:
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