Description
Cost-Effective Student Capital for Digital
Health Projects
Imagine you are the Project Analyst tasked
with recruiting a large team required to transform a paper-based HIMSS EMRAM
Stage 1.2 hospital to a HIMSS EMRAM Stage 6 in one year. Where do you find a
team with the skills to support a major initiative and the willingness to
accept a short-term contract, while working with a limited staff budget? Meet co-presenter Chelsea King, who
successfully hired and deployed a “co-op army” of nearly 60 students across key
implementation stages, including technical readiness testing, change
management, data validation and training of over 7,000+ clinicians and staff.
Learn how Chelsea partnered with co-presenter Tammy Kim-Newman, at the
University of Waterloo, to attract top talent with less than 4 months to go
before the students needed to arrive at work.
Learn stakeholder successes, challenges and best practices. Discover the
importance of future-proof student capital as an invaluable tool for digital health
transformations moving forward.
Tammy Kim-Newman, BSc
Business Developer
University of Waterloo
Chelsea King, BSc, MBA
Lead, Organizational Change Management, AHS
Provincial Connect Care
Alberta Health Services
Pandemic Tech: Reaching 10 Million+ People in
100 Days
As the virus raged, governments and the
health care system faced an unprecedented crisis with few tools. Within weeks,
a grassroots effort started to deploy the power of open source technology and
enable faster rollout of Exposure Notification technology – using phones to
track the spread of the pandemic and help slow the virus. These apps then spread to dozens of countries
and states through collaboration among public health authorities,
technologists, and government officials. Within a few short months, Exposure
Notification went from being an idea to a working service on tens of millions
of phones. The discussion brings listeners behind the scenes. What worked and
what didn’t in the early global effort to rollout Exposure Notification.
Lessons learned explore how to do it better, faster, and the importance of
collaboration, innovation, and open source technologies in improving public
health responses in times of crisis—and its potential to improve population
health overall.
Aaron Snow
CEO
Canadian Digital Service
J Wanger
Head of Implementer's Forum
Linux Foundation Public Health
A Digital Trust Ecosystem for Patient Access
TRUSTSPHERE (TS) is a digital trust platform
enabling customer / patient driven access to data and consent to share data. TS
is developed by a consortium of innovative Canadian entrepreneurial companies
that have contributed components of their core in market solutions to the
platform. TS is tailored in its first implementation to the specific clinical
cohort of children living with insulin dependent diabetes, their parents and
guardians, providers and others in their circle of care, and is scalable to
other clinical cohorts, and other communities across Canada and beyond. TS is
unique in that it integrates research fellows working along side technical
resources, and includes a research process rooted in patient oriented research
methodologies that facilitate co-creation with key stakeholders. In addition to
user driven and controlled access to personal health information (PHI), the platform
also supports the option to consent to donate PHI to research.
Tibor Van Rooij, PhD
Professor
University of British Columbia
Shazhan Amed, MD, FRCPC, MSc, PH
Paediatrician / Endocrinologist
BC Children's Hospital / UBC
Sponsorship
Opportunities – Exclusive
Benefits
- 1 sponsor representative to assist in moderating presentations
- Client must remain vendor neutral and not actively promote sponsor product or solution
- Verbal recognition of sponsor during the program
- Logo on session screens
- Logo displayed in prominent areas on-site (electronic signage)
- Collateral material table outside of session room
- Post-conference list of scanned attendees (Name, Title, Company) sent two weeks post Conference
- HIMSS Conference Supporter (Logo listed on conference website with hyperlink to exhibitor profile, logo in various HIMSS marketing materials including onsite print and mobile app, logo displayed on Conference Supporter signage on-site)
- HIMSS Priority Points – 5
- HIMSS Exhibitor / Client Badges – 4 (you determine the mix)
- HIMSS Full Conference Badges - 1
Investment*
$13,500 HIMSS Corporate Member
$15,000 Non Member
GL Code– 401300 – 1031 (HIMSS Internal use)
*Rates reflect Global Conference Exhibitor participation