2010年3月22日 星期一

FW: Newsbank : Health care bill, Networking and Security


-------------------------------------------
From: Chris Taylor (ICBT-US)
Sent: Tuesday, March 23, 2010 7:12:50 AM
To: Newsbank
Subject: Newsbank : Health care bill, Networking and Security
Auto forwarded by a Rule


Health care bill, networking and security, by Jon Oltsik, Monday March 22, 2010 

 

Source: http://www.insecureaboutsecurity.com/2010/03/22/health-care-bill-networking-and-security/

In 2009, the Federal government passed the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act (HITECH). The HITECH act invests $17 billion in information technology infrastructure and Medicare and Medicaid incentives to encourage doctors to adopt technologies for Electronic Health Records (EHR) and then electronically share health data. The act also strengthens Federal privacy and security laws.

Fast forward to Sunday, March 21. The U.S. House of Representatives passes a major health reform bill that will soon become law. The $940 billion plan will overhaul health care for all American citizens and provide insurance for approximately 32 million Americans.

Forget politics or whether you are in favor or opposed to health care reform. The fact is that there is a lot of money going into health care right now, and this trend will continue into the future.

In my mind, this means that IT vendors need to embrace a focused sales and marketing effort in the health care vertical. I’m not talking about brochures or trade shows, I’m talking about real expertise on health care IT architecture, requirements, regulations, and vision.

ESG Research indicates that in 2010, health care organizations will:

  1. Increase IT spending. Health care is one of three verticals where IT spending will overwhelmingly increase.
  2. Maintain a business focus on security and compliance in their business processes. This means that all IT vendors should include security and compliance in their sales, marketing, and product strategies.
  3. Invest in networking and networking services like IP telephony. There is also a major focus on network security.
  4. Need security help. Health care organizations admit that they don’t have the security skills they need. Good opportunity for professional services and SaaS vendors.
  5. Embrace desktop virtualization. Health care organizations are ahead of every other vertical industry on desktop virtualization. This move may require network, security, and data center investments.

This is just the tip of the iceberg.

Health care already makes up one-sixth of the U.S. economy. If that hasn’t motivated IT vendors to bone up on health care expertise, then HITECH and the new health care reform should.

Health care CIOs should demand deep industry knowledge from their IT vendors. Savvy vendors won’t disappoint them.

沒有留言: