Happy New Year! We’ll leave it to others to debate whether 2020 is the end of one decade or the beginning of the next. Instead, we already are looking ahead for what the year will bring in the way of engaging healthcare IT to improve patient outcomes.
What are the “standard” New Year’s resolutions? Lose weight. Be healthier. They are, at a level, similar to what we in the healthcare IT community often set out to do: “create standards,” “improve interoperability.”
However, the enormity of what we are trying to do becomes overwhelming. The goals are too big and often not quantifiable. That makes it easier to quit. “Forget it! I can’t do that.”
That is a vicious cycle that swirls downward. Instead, let’s consider the virtuous circle: small victories that fuel other small victories that, over time, meet bigger goals.
Breaking big-picture goals into smaller chunks makes them easier to tackle. Experts suggest such things as eliminating soda six days a week or making a commitment to exercise for 20 minutes a day as ways to tackle “get healthy/lose weight.”
So, we wanted to propose a few things we believe could move the healthcare IT community forward with its goals. They are focused and – aside from politics or financial interests (which aren’t mutually exclusive, of course) – doable in relatively short order if resources were purposefully allocated to them.
All three of these items are critically important because they potentially impact patient safety. At the least, they present the potential for missed or overlapping care, which can escalate costs and diminish best-case outcomes. We wrote a good deal about No. 2 in 2019; expect No. 3 to be a focus this year.
What are the three items you want to see tackled in 2020? We look forward to hearing from you and discussing those things in person over the course of the year.