Q&A: UC Davis Health’s Keisuke Nakagawa on Innovation and Collaboration

UC Davis Health takes aim at problems in digital health equity through a key collaboration with Amazon Web Services.

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Over the course of a year, UC Davis Health may see more than 1 million clinic or office visits as it serves patients across the Sacramento area and other stretches of Northern California.

Providing care for diverse communities has kept the academic health system at the leading edge. “It’s not that innovation drives diversity, equity and inclusion. It’s the other way around. DEI is driving the next generation of innovation in healthcare,” says Keisuke Nakagawa, executive director of the UC Davis Health Cloud Innovation Center (CIC) and director of innovation for the Digital CoLab, the system’s digital health innovation hub.

UC Davis Health announced the CIC in partnership with Amazon Web Services in 2021 with a focus on digital health equity and open innovation. The Digital CoLab is hosting the CIC.

Nakagawa spoke with HealthTech about collaboration, human-centered design and how to ensure that lessons learned from failures amount to real change.

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HEALTHTECH: Tell us more about the CIC and its distinctions from the Digital CoLab.

NAKAGAWA: We announced a strategic partnership with AWS for the world's first academic medical center to host the Cloud Innovation Center. The thematic focus of that is digital health equity and open innovation. The CIC embodies our vision for how academic medical centers can partner with industry to drive thought leadership and innovation. 

Industry has always partnered with academic medical centers, but I think some of the overhead and bureaucracy has to do with intellectual property. What if we didn't have to worry about IP and just focused on solving those big, hairy problems in healthcare? The CIC is a platform for any organization, any health system, any patient or clinician to be able to post problems that they see in health equity. From there, we work with them to brainstorm and prototype solutions, free from IP or budget constraints since those are often the barriers that can hinder innovation and collaboration. 

We have so many patients and clinicians who have amazing ideas, but they don't know who to go to or how to create technical specifications for an app or prototype. How do we remove those barriers so people can just bring their expertise and ideas, and we can handle the rest? That type of model can drive a lot of untapped potential in healthcare to solve big problems.

Ultimately, we’re exploring how we can create new models of innovation within healthcare. We see opportunities to break the mold around how to innovate and collaborate more fluidly. 

HEALTHTECH: What does human-centered design mean for your organization? How do you define it?

NAKAGAWA: We define human-centered design as the practice of reframing the narrative around the person and experience instead of the technology. We prioritize understanding the problem or experience as deeply as possible. Curiosity is the guiding force; listening is the primary tool. But there’s the definition, and there’s the practice, and the true test is whether you can truly practice that philosophy. How do we think about innovation as human-first and experience-driven, with technology as just an enabler? 

In medicine, this type of practice is especially difficult because we rely on expertise passed down through generations of training to make sure our patients get the best care possible. But for the practice of innovation, we want to take the opposite approach — we want to remove ourselves from our own expertise and challenge our unconscious biases, or at least be able to recognize that no matter what we do, we bring a certain amount of bias. If we can be more self-aware of our biases, we will naturally want to include other people in the equation. Ultimately, we try to approach everything with a beginner’s mind, which allows us to tackle every problem with extreme curiosity, respect and humility. 

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HEALTHTECH: How do concepts of DEI fit into this conversation? What are the structures in place to combat implicit biases?

NAKAGAWA: Diversity of thought, experience, background and opinion are central to our success. But we do need to have better structures in place to ensure that we’re bringing that diversity to every problem we’re tackling. We can’t just completely rely on our individual commitments to combating implicit bias. At UC Davis Health, we’re creating those structures and processes by engaging with the community at every stage of the design and innovation process. How do we incorporate people in our communities into the design and innovation processes from day one? 

With the CIC, for example, we are being very intentional about making sure that we’re getting challenges sourced from underserved communities. We see them as key partners in our effort to drive more equitable innovations. We need to make sure they’re involved from the very beginning and at every stage of the innovation process. That’s some of the structure we are putting in place to ensure that we are combating implicit biases and unlocking new ideas.

HEALTHTECH: What successes or failures have you noticed when structures to ensure DEI are applied to a project, or when they haven’t been applied? 

NAKAGAWA: Unfortunately, I can't give you good examples of success stories yet, but we’re very cognizant of two key fail points at the design and testing stages. 

In the design stage, I don't think we invest enough in understanding the problem. When it comes to innovation, we jump too quickly to figuring out what the solution is. But how do we create a groundbreaking solution without investing enough in understanding the problem? When we look at reducing health disparities, a lot of time is required to unpack the root causes of those disparities. Being able to step back and recognize that this is not going to be a quick exercise — even just saying that out loud to the team at the beginning — is important. If we can study each problem deeply, the solutions will organically reveal themselves in the process. In medicine, we often need to respond quickly to situations, especially in the ICU or emergency department. In innovation and design, we have the luxury of taking our time to explore the problem and let curiosity be the guide. 

The Digital CoLab team, from left to right: Dr. Ashish Atreja, UC Davis Health CIO and Chief Digital Health Officer; Angela Velazquez Wallace, Digital Media Lead; Keisuke Nakagawa; Daniel Seth Bradley, Business Intelligence Analyst; and Stephanie James, Project Policy Analyst and Nakagawa’s Executive Assistant.

Another key fail point is in the testing stage. At UC Davis Health, our geographic catchment area is about 60 percent of California, namely Central and Northern California, and we have one of the most diverse patient populations, including migrant farmworkers, rural populations, urban populations, and many races and ethnicities. When you want to test your solution, it’s natural that you test with patients in proximity. For us, because we have always had to deliver care to such a geographically and demographically diverse patient population, we are also putting systems in place to ensure that we’re always testing and validating with a diverse patient population. If you make that upfront investment, those solutions can scale a lot more in the long run. 

HEALTHTECH: When you talk about being deliberate in ideation and design, is there a need for agility? Do you allow yourself to fail fast as well?

NAKAGAWA: When you’re in digital health, having to code a functional prototype is an extremely heavy lift. There are much leaner ways to test and validate ideas without having to build a functional prototype. Those simpler, leaner models of testing are not so common in healthcare. There’s a tendency to make sure that everything is perfect and polished before we even share it with a clinician. Instead, we should start with rough sketches of what we’re thinking of and be willing to share with clinicians and patients at early stages of ideation. This also signals to them that we see them as co-innovators, not just end users. We want everybody who we interact with to feel like they can join us at the whiteboard and start drawing with us. This also helps to create buy-in down the road as the idea takes shape. 

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HEALTHTECH: How do you evaluate ideas coming through the CIC so they’re aligned with your organization’s digital health equity goals? What does the evaluation criteria look like? 

NAKAGAWA: We are still in the process of developing that evaluation criteria. Aligning to the organization’s digital health equity goals means that you need to be able to measure digital health equity in the first place — that is one of the key challenges. We should have national standards for how to measure digital health equity.

I do think we have a lot of frameworks to build on to develop national standards. For example, social determinants of health is a good framework that is already quite mature that we can leverage. We can extend that framework to start measuring digital determinants of health, such as digital literacy, digital equity and data inclusion. These variables map to the digital divide, which has only gotten wider during COVID-19. 

Our CIO and chief digital health officer, Dr. Ashish Atreja, always says, “Our mission is to leave no patient behind.” How can we measure digital health equity in a way that allows us to evaluate whether interventions are closing the digital divide and ensuring that no patient is left behind? We want to work with experts in health equity, DEI and technology — nationally and internationally — that can help to develop a scorecard for digital health equity. This is going to be a key part of the CIC’s early work. I think there’s already a lot of good material that we can work with to create that shared framework for how to drive digital health equity across the U.S.

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HEALTHTECH: How do you incorporate the lessons learned from failures and the values obtained through successes, and how do you envision that being fed back into the CIC?

NAKAGAWA: The lessons learned need to be shared as widely as possible. That is the vision of the CIC: open innovation. Ultimately, our purpose is to improve health outcomes for all patients. To achieve that grand vision, we need to collaborate with institutions across the country and around the world. We need a vehicle to share ideas more fluidly and explore problems more collaboratively. With the CIC’s commitment to open sourcing everything we produce, we’re giving a clear message that we’re putting the mission of achieving health equity front and center. There's such an amazing opportunity for us to work together, to be mission-aligned and create more value in healthcare. When it comes to health equity, it really is a shared mission. By involving our community, understanding problems deeply and sharing our findings openly, I'm optimistic that there are going to be great ideas that we can build and scale together.