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Barry P. Chaiken, MD, MPH    

Futurist, Physician & Author of "Navigating the Code: How Technology Transforms the Patient-Physician Journey"

Barry P. Chaiken, MD, MPH has over 25 years’ experience in healthcare information technology, clinical transformation, and business intelligence. He is currently President of DocsNetwork Ltd. and previously worked with the National Institutes of Health, UK National Health Service, McKesson, Infor, and Salesforce/Tableau.

Chaiken is the author of the recently released Navigating the Code: How Technology Transforms the Patient-Physician Journey, a book on healthcare information technology and its potential impact on quality, access, and cost of care.

During his career, Chaiken provided quality and patient safety expertise to providers, payers, and life science organizations, helping them utilize information technology to improve clinical and administrative activities. He has served as a guest lecturer and consultant on topics including patient safety, clinician adoption of information technology, quality improvement, and healthcare analytics. Chaiken also assisted hospitals and technology firms in creating medical software products and services.

Chaiken served as a Healthcare Advisory Board member to numerous organizations as head of DocsNetwork, his boutique healthcare IT consulting company. He has delivered more than 60 CME lectures and served on the editorial board of the journal of Patient Safety and Quality Healthcare. Chaiken wrote a column on technology and quality for Patient Safety and Quality Healthcare. He also served as Conference Chair of the annual Digital Healthcare Conference and contributed to WTN Media’s online publications.

Chaiken received his medical degree from Downstate Medical Center, his master in public health degree in health services administration from the Harvard School of Public Health, and his bachelor of arts degree in psychology from the University at Albany. He acquired his specialty training as an Epidemic Intelligence Service Officer from the Centers for Disease Control and as a preventive medicine resident from the New Jersey State Department of Health. He is board-certified in General Preventive Medicine and Public Health and in Health Care Quality Management. Chaiken is an Overseas Fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine.

Chaiken served as a Board member (2006-2010), Board Liaison to HIMSS Europe (2006-2009), and Board Chair (2009-2010), and continues his involvement as a Fellow of the Health Information Management and Systems Society (HIMSS). He is a guest lecturer in graduate and undergraduate level courses in healthcare information technology at Boston University’s Questrom School of Management and Tufts University.

Speech Topics


Cost or Quality: Why Our Thinking About Healthcare Spending is All Wrong

Health maintenance organizations, capitated plans, restricted networks, accountable care organizations, all were created to manage the cost of care. But is cost the right place to focus? These strategies were unsuccessful in controlling costs as the U.S. surpassed $4 trillion in healthcare spending. Our focus should be on the very same thing that all our other purchases are based – value. Artificial-intelligence-designed workflow, digital workers, and analytics-influenced processes are just some of the ways revolutionary information technology can bridge the value-cost gap.

Rather than focus on what we spend on healthcare, we must aim to deliver value and then make choices about how we invest our resources.

Health 2035: Medical AI, Precision Medicine, Printed Organs, Virtual Reality

The U.S. offers the best healthcare services in the world. Or does it? Is a patient in rural Iowa able to access the same level of care as someone in Boston? The recent expanded use of telemedicine helped reduce the regional gap in care, but more evolution is necessary. Our embrace of precision medicine is just beginning, and new information technology tools are helping to make it a reality. Replacement organs will first be harvested from animals, followed by their assembly cell by cell. Combination medications with dosing specific to the individual are printed daily in the home. The patient experience will be seamless and comprehensive.

The expansion of healthcare information technology will drive these trends and help us secure the best care for ourselves and family.

Don’t We All Deserve the Best Patient Experience?

Quality, safety, access, and affordability of care. Sure they are top of mind for all patients, but is that all we should care about? Aren’t we consuming healthcare services and therefore that makes us consumers? Perhaps our patient experience should mimic our consumer experience where care is patient/consumer-centered. And that includes how we interact with our providers, payers, and caregivers.

The technology we use in our daily lives can be applied to enhance our patient experience and help ensure we obtain the best possible health outcomes.

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