Educating students in healthcare information technology: IS community barriers, challenges, and paths forward

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Abstract

Healthcare information technology (HIT) is an exciting field to which information systems (IS) scholars have much to contribute. As the IS community continues to tackle enrollment and growth issues across the nation, HIT becomes an attractive topic for the IS educators to embrace. Careful consideration and domain understanding are needed to ensure a suitable depth and balance in curricula. The intent of this article is to provide guidance to the IS community to support and promote successful HIT educational courses and programs by investigating three important questions: (1) Does IS have a role in HIT? (2) Where does an IS educator look to begin with HIT education? (3) How do IS educators frame their vision for HIT curricula leveraging the discipline's strengths? Our hope is that this article will illuminate HIT curriculum matters for the general IS faculty and generate purposeful debate regarding how best to position HIT education within the IS discipline if IS faculty want to join in the quest to successfully educate and place graduates in the growing health technology sector. © 2013 by the Association for Information Systems.

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APA

Chatterjee, S., LeRouge, C. M., & Tremblay, M. C. (2013). Educating students in healthcare information technology: IS community barriers, challenges, and paths forward. Communications of the Association for Information Systems, 33(1), 1–14. https://doi.org/10.17705/1cais.03301

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