Informatics pro chosen to execute e-Health plan for TN
By Milt Capps Last updated 8:20 a.m.
Will Rice a former Vanderbilt University informatics consultant, has been chosen to lead Tennessee's strategic e-Health information and technology initiatives.Rice reports to State Finance-Administration Commissioner Dave Goetz, who announced Rice's appointment as executive director of the Office of e-Health Initiatives, on Wednesday.![]() Rice's duties, for example, call for him to serve as an ex officio member of the board of the nonprofit Health Information Partnership for Tennessee (HIP TN). Rice's boss, Goetz, is a public-sector member of the HIP TN board of directors. HIP TN's mission is to improve the quality of the state's healthcare by advancing health-information exchanges and complementary initiatives. The group's board includes executives from Eastman Chemical, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Tennessee, CIGNA Healthcare, AARP Tennessee, and Tennessee's Pharmacists and Medical Associations, among others. The State's e-Health allies have proven adept at winning funding for key initiatives, some of which have been closely watched at the national level. ![]() Toward such ends, the e-Health group last year announced hiring the law firm of Manatt Phelps & Phillip and its Health Solutions division to help Tennessee pursue ARRA/Stimulus funding. The firm was founded by Chuck Manatt, onetime head of the Democratic National Committee, a co-chairman of the 1992 Clinton/Gore campaign and former FedEx Corp. board member. Prior to his appointment this week, Rice was a health informatics senior consultant with the Vanderbilt Center for Better Health ![]() Prior to that, he was a health IT consultant with the Foundation for eHealth Initiative; and, a consultant with the Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research (AHRQ), where, according to biographical material online, Rice "developed business, technology and marketing strategies..." The AHRQ was a key source of funding for the Bredesen Administration's Volunteer eHealth Initiative, which helped spawn, among other things, the Memphis health-information Alliance that Rice supported while at Vanderbilt. During the years 1997-2001, Rice was a senior designer with Nashville-based HealthStream Inc. VNC research indicates his HealthStream work centered around graphic design of user interfaces for the NASDAQ-listed company. Rice earned his master in biomedical informatics (MBI) at the Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU) School of Medicine, in 2009; and, a bachelor's in fine arts at Washington University, in 1996. ![]() Rice is the fourth person to lead the e-Health unit since its creation by Gov. Phil Bredesen's Executive Order ![]() Generally low-profile Hargiss made a bit of news in December when she reportedly told a gathering sponsored by the Tennessee Medical Association that providers might be wise to hold in abeyance information-technology spending plans, pending resolution of federal Stimulus funding and outcomes-improvement criteria. Those "meaningful use" criteria for qualifying for federal subsidies for health IT expenditures remain uncertain, although a public-comment period on the subject ended March 15, and clarity is tentatively set to manifest before year's-end. ♦
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