The covid pandemic has produced whole new data streams from infection reports, contact tracing and vaccine-related issues. Rich Bryant, the chief technical offi...
Unfortunately, the pandemic and the response it demanded put a hold on this transformation, according to Rich Bryant, the chief technical officer for healthcare at Veritas. The transformation is a data-intensive effort, and Veritas, he said, has been aiding the government in retaining health care provider data in a secure and resilient way.
The covid pandemic has produced whole new data streams from infection reports, contact tracing, and vaccine-related issues. Bryant said the learnings from the pandemic will be pivotal, after it recedes, to improving the metrics associated with underserved populations and lowering healthcare costs.
Bryant pointed out that the Department of Health and Human Services covers 85% of reimbursements for healthcare in a nation that spends nearly 17 percent of its GDP on health. He added that answers for how to curb these rising costs will likely emerge from the large amounts of data the healthcare complex generates.
Telehealth techniques – especially those demonstrated by the Veterans Affairs Department and by the armed services’ medical components – have shown how, in many instances, effective care can get delivered at lower cost than traditional in-person. Bryant said a legislative fix is needed to let reimbursement for telehealth in general continue past the national emergency. He telehealth will only improve with the introduction of internet-of-things devices, medical peripherals connected to smart phones or otherwise able to communicate vital information to remote health care providers.
Bryant also said that the zero trust architectures called for by the Biden administration’s executive order on cybersecurity enables deeper and wider data sharing among agencies with vast amounts of health related data. That in turn will enable more research into outcomes – leading to new efficiencies in health care delivery. But these advances, Bryant said, will require comprehensive data management approaches that include enterprise data governance.
“Veritas, as an enterprise data governance company, can help them with that process,” Bryant said.
Copyright © 2024 Federal News Network. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
Healthcare Chief Technical Officer, Veritas
Host, The Federal Drive, Federal News Network
Healthcare Chief Technical Officer, Veritas
Rick Bryant is the Healthcare Chief Technical Officer for VERITAS. In this role, he leads initiatives within VERITAS to serve the healthcare information technology industry through technology excellence and process solutions. Rick brings over 25 years of industry experience, with roles spanning from Infrastructure Management, Chief Information Security Officer, and Chief Technical Officer where he was responsible for architecting and implementing EMR systems.
Prior to joining VERITAS, Rick served as the Healthcare Practice Manager and National Healthcare Architect for Symantec Corporation. Past positions include Chief Information Security and Chief Technical Officer at Texas Children’s Hospital and Executive Manager of Infrastructure for M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, TX. Rick developed and led the first Shared Services Organization for Hearst and Managed outsourced services for the global IT service provider, WiPro. In addition, he created and managed all client IT services for First Data Corporation.
Host, The Federal Drive, Federal News Network
Tom Temin has been the host of the Federal Drive since 2006 and has been reporting on technology markets for more than 30 years. Prior to joining Federal News Network, Tom was a long-serving editor-in-chief of Government Computer News and Washington Technology magazines. Tom also contributes a regular column on government information technology.