HEALTHTECH: Tell us more about the tagline “Creating Tomorrow’s Health.” How will that guide this year’s conference?
WOLF: When we created the original tagline, we were thinking about it from a technology standpoint. But given some of the uncertainty in the market, it really brought home for us the recognition of our guiding light, which is built into our vision statement to realize the full health potential of every human, everywhere. It’s built into our mission statement to reform the global health ecosystem through the power of information and technology.
There’s going to be a lot of great case studies and insights from digital health leaders: The president of Samsung Medical Center in South Korea will share how they utilize information and technology to accelerate care delivery from an efficiency standpoint. It’s quite an amazing story for the keynote address.
HEALTHTECH: What are the top three IT focus areas for healthcare organizations in the U.S. this year? What would you say drives interest in those focus areas?
WOLF: I'm actually going to give you four. Digital health transformation is the strategic question that everyone is looking at, and work is centered around trying to solve for the big challenges in healthcare: aging population; chronic care/disease management continues to grow and improve; geographic displacement is a challenge that’s not just about rural versus urban but is about broadly opening care access for all people; our funding challenges are perhaps more pronounced this year than ever before with the changes we’re hearing out of Washington, at least preliminarily. Our patients are an educated consumer base that want more services brought to them. There’s still a gap in actionable information, which is under attack from a cybersecurity standpoint. And staffing challenges – we simply don’t have enough people to provide the best possible care to all patients.
Digital health transformation is the cornerstone, and that's where people want to understand what to do better.
A subset of that is AI. There will be more AI discussions this year because there’s been more growth. A few years ago at the conference, we heard that AI was coming. Last year, we heard examples of how AI was being used. This year, we're going to see the results of AI implementation — what is working, what is not and what’s next. So, we’re starting to get that circular feedback loop of deployment results, changes that are coming and movement toward maturity.
Cybersecurity is a huge subject that our members are concerned with, and so we’ve set up a Cybersecurity Command Center pavilion this year, so attendees can better understand where the challenges lie and what solutions are in development.
Those three are the major topics that we’re seeing across healthcare. Underneath those is workforce development. Health organizations are in the process of retraining their staff, getting them certified, understanding how to use those new tools and capabilities. And frankly, you have to get educated to appreciate the redesign that’s happening inside healthcare.