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In December 2009, responding to the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act passed earlier that year, faculty members at the University of South Carolina in the Integrated Information Technology  (IIT) Program in the College of Hospitality, Retail and Sport Management and the Department of Health Services Policy and Management (HSPM) in the Arnold School of Public Health, began discussing the development of a master’s degree in health information technology. The HITECH Act provides incentives to the medical community to achieve the goal established by President Bush that all Americans will have electronic health records by 2014. To this end, approximately $36 billion is being made available over six years for the development and implementation of healthcare information technology. This stimulus had already begun creating a need for a new cadre of health IT professionals.

During the spring of 2010, faculty members in the two programs prepared a draft outline of the new program, one which would combine information technology coursework with courses in health care administration to prepare leaders in this rapidly developing field. Through the spring and summer, the faculty worked to refine the proposal and to build support for the program from the deans and department heads of the various schools and colleges at the University. By the fall, a full formal proposal was ready to go before the appropriate university committees.

During the summer of 2010, a search committee consisting of faculty from both programs as well as a student, who was also a manager at Palmetto Health, began the process of searching for a director for the program. That fall, ads were placed online and in various academic periodicals, and applications began to be received.  By January 2011, the finalists for the position were selected and interviews began.   The process culminated in April 2011, as Dr. Elizabeth Regan, the Elmer and Donna Smith Endowed Chair in Information Systems at Morehead State University, Chair of the Board of Directors of the Northeast Kentucky Regional Health Information Organization and member of the Tri-State Health IT Regional Extension Center,  accepted the position. She arrived at the university in July.

At the same time that the candidates for the director’s position were being interviewed, the faculty members were busy writing the syllabi for the new courses that would be included the in the program. Meetings were held with executives from organizations such as BlueCross BlueShield of South Carolina, the South Carolina Hospital Association and Palmetto Health to get their input about the program and its content. Likewise, a presentation about the proposed program at the Innoventure Conference that spring gathered additional input from the business and health care community. During the fall of 2011, under Dr. Regan’s leadership, the proposed courses and the degree program received approval from the Graduate Council of the university and the Board of Trustees.

While the course approval process was underway, searches were started in HSPM and in IIT for new faculty members with health information technology expertise.  Candidates were interviewed during March, April and May of 2012, and three faculty members were hired to arrive this fall, one in the HSPM and two in IIT.

The final hurdles for the program proposal were approvals from the external regulatory agencies. In April 2012, the Southern Association of College and Schools gave its blessing to the program, followed by the South Carolina Commission on Higher Education in May. The program is scheduled for fall 2012 start-up and students have started to enroll. The program is being offered in executive format with courses scheduled evenings, Saturdays and online. Applications for the first class will be accepted through August 15, and enrollment in the first health IT classes is open to graduate students in other health science programs as well as unclassified graduate students.

Details about the Master of Health Information Technology (MHIT) degree program will be coming up in another blog post next month. For more information, please visit the program web site at http://www.hrsm.sc.edu/iIT/graduate/mhit.html.  Comments and suggestions about this new program are welcome.

GRADUATE STUDIES
in Health Information Technology

University of South Carolina

INTEGRATED INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY . COLLEGE OF HOSPITALITY, RETAIL AND SPORT MANAGEMENT
IN COLLABORATION WITH THE ARNOLD SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

 

Integrated Information Technology at the University of South Carolina
announces new Master’s program

Professionals who understand the unique relationship between information technology, people, health, and the healthcare system are in short supply and high demand. The new Masters in Health Information Technology (MHIT) program at the University of South Carolina blends a technical IT foundation with coursework covering current clinical trends, government regulations and healthcare-specific management practices. Offered jointly by the university’s Integrated Information Technology (iIT) program and the Arnold School of Public Health Department of Health Services Policy and Management, the interdisciplinary MHIT program is designed specifically to produce highly qualified professionals and leaders with expertise in both information technology and health administration.

 

The Integrated Information Technology (iIT) Program at the University of South Carolina is a leader in the areas of heath information technology, system design and implementation, network support and administration, database systems, Website design and management, corporate training and development, project management, technology innovation and change management. The iIT program is a founding member and strategic partner with IT-oLogy, an IT incubator organization sponsored by leading SC companies dedicated to creating IT talent. Faculty in iIT are nationally recognized for their outstanding teaching and research.

Find Out More!
Visit www.HRSM.sc.edu/iIT.
Download the flyer.
Contact the Graduate Program Manager
College of Hospitality, Retail and Sport Management
803-777-2053
HRSMinfo@sc.edu
Office of Graduate Admissions
Visit the graduate school at www.gradschool.sc.edu.
803-777-4243

      

Health IT Jobs in Demand:

  • Chief Information Officer
  • Chief Medical Information Officer
  • Medical Director of Information Systems
  • Medical Director of Clinical Information Systems
  • Chief Nursing Information Officer
  • Chief Technology Officer
  • Chief Transformation Officer
  • Director of Informatics
  • Manager, Enterprise Analytics
    Project Manager
  • Vice President of Clinical Informatics and Innovation
  • Vice President of Optimization and Transformation

 


College of HRSM featured in Carolinian

The Spring 2012 edition of Carolinian includes a special 8-page insert featuring the College of HRSM. Additional information for alumni and friends of HRSM is available at www.mycarolina.org.

 

IT-oLogy @ Innovista

 

 

 

 

 

It’s a sign of progress. Friday, the Tower at 1301 Gervais — a landmark in the Columbia skyline – gets a new look with IT-oLogy @ Innovista.

SignThe installation of the IT-oLogy @ Innovista signage exemplifies the already successful partnership between IT-oLogy and Innovista to foster the development, growth and relocation of information technology (IT) companies, small and large.

“This marks the fruition of one of our original visions: a district with the strategic clustering of IT companies in one locality,” said Don Herriott, Director of Innovista Partnerships. “More companies are seeing the advantages of co-location, and IT-oLogy @ Innovista now houses 9 IT companies and counting.”

IT-oLogy’s mission is to promote, teach and grow the IT talent pipeline and profession. With Innovista’s mission of creating, attracting and growing knowledge-based companies in the Midlands of South Carolina, the two constitute a perfect partnership for recruiting to the new IT-oLogy @ Innovista building.  Clustering IT companies in a single location, such as the Tower at 1301 Gervais Street, can open the door for new opportunities for partnership and business development, stimulate new ideas and industry innovation and help in the recruitment of new companies to the region.

“Our goal is to bring the IT community together in a collaborative environment to develop the IT pipeline through programs at all levels,” said Lonnie Emard, Executive Director of IT-oLogy. “The partnership with Innovista is a perfect example of this collaborative effort because we are bringing together people and companies that are dedicated to both of our missions.”

The establishment of an IT district is not about a sign at the top of the Tower at 1301 Gervais Street. While that is a visible representation of the partnership, the real story is about what happens both in and out of the building. The uniqueness of IT-oLogy is that it is not a single company or entity; instead, it is a non-profit collaboration of companies, academic institutions and organizations uniting to address the nationwide shortage of skilled IT professionals. To address this challenge, IT-oLogy offers K-12 programs where students explore numerous IT career options, the internships for undergraduate students and the continuing education opportunities that keep professionals constantly learning and up-to-date. When all this happens, the result is a vibrant economic picture, which is the goal of Innovista.

The confluence of opportunities in IT-oLogy @ Innovista will provide a home in the community for local talent as well. “At the University of South Carolina, our responsibility to students and alumni extends beyond education. It includes a commitment to helping them find jobs, good jobs, when they graduate,” said Dr. Harris Pastides, President of the University of South Carolina. “The pairing of IT-oLogy and Innovista is perfect because of their complementary missions, each focused on growing our innovation economy in this region and across South Carolina.”

“From the outset, the vision of IT-oLogy has been to have business and academic partners collaborate to advance IT talent,” Emard said. “The lack of IT talent is a national epidemic that is solved in a local manner. The establishment of IT-oLogy @ Innovista is a visible representation of bringing companies together to collaborate and partner, fostering new ideas and technologies.”

Recently, IT-oLogy announced the establishment of the branch IT-oLogy @ University Center of Greenville, located in Greenville, South Carolina. This is yet another way IT-oLogy is working locally to address a national issue. In the future, IT-oLogy will continue to open branches across the nation as a way to advance IT talent in a grassroots manner.

Innovista is a strategic economic development effort that is connecting the University of South Carolina and university-spawned innovations with entrepreneurs, businesses and stakeholders. Its purpose is to help attract and create technology-intensive, knowledge-based companies, which result in higher-paying jobs and raise the standard of living in South Carolina.

For more information about Innovista, visit www.innovista.sc.edu or contact Lauren Edwards at 803.777.8786 or Laurene@mailbox.sc.edu.

IT-oLogy is a non-profit collaboration of businesses, academic institutions and other organizations dedicated to growing the IT talent pipeline and advancing the IT profession. IT-oLogy does this through three major initiatives: Promote IT (K-12 schools), Teach IT (Higher Education) and Grow IT (Professionals and Businesses).

For more information about IT-oLogy, visit www.it-ology.org or contact Powers Strickland at 803.354.5735 or powers.strickland@it-ology.org.