VU takes role in national center for health information
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has awarded $15 million to create a new center for health information and privacy.
The center, which will be headquartered at the University of Illinois, will include researchers from Vanderbilt University; University of California, Berkeley; Carnegie Mellon University; Dartmouth College; Harvard Medical School; Johns Hopkins University; Northwestern Memorial Hospital; Stanford University; University of Massachusetts, Amherst and the University of Washington.
It is one of four health care research centers established and funded for four years with American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 funds as part of the $60 million Strategic Healthcare Information Technology Advanced Research Projects on Security (SHARPS) program.
“Our participation in the new SHARPS center reflects the fact that Vanderbilt has become highly visible in the field of health care security and privacy,” said Janos Sztipanovits, Ph.D., director of the Institute for Software Integrated Systems (ISIS) at Vanderbilt's School of Engineering.
Sztipanovits, Mark Frisse, M.D., MBA, Accenture professor of Biomedical Informatics at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, and Edward Schulz, director of Information Technology Integration at VUMC, head up the joint Vanderbilt team. William Stead, M.D., the Medical Center's Chief Strategy and Information Officer, will serve as one of the center's two chief scientists.
One of Vanderbilt's unique contributions is the close partnership it has established between its engineers and clinical researchers, Sztipanovits and Frisse agree. The Medical Center has a 15-year track record in the development of electronic health care records and ISIS contributes a structured approach to data security and extensive software tools that it has developed to protect sensitive data for the Department of Defense.
“Our ability to combine engineering and medical skills and apply them to the domain of health care gives us a distinct advantage in fulfilling the goals of the new program, which is to identify barriers to adoption of information technology and develop solutions that allow its meaningful use,” Frisse said.
Vanderbilt has gained experience in this area through its participation in the TRUST Science and Technology Center founded in 2006 by the National Science Foundation. The $40 million TRUST Center, whose core members are the University of California, Berkeley, Carnegie Mellon University, Cornell University, Stanford University and Vanderbilt, is one of the nation's leading research consortiums focusing on the scientific foundations of system security and privacy. Vanderbilt has headed up TRUST's health-care-related program.
The SHARPS center will focus on three subjects: electronic health records, health information exchanges and telemedicine.