The typing is on the wall: Australia’s healthcare future needs a digitally capable workforce
Leanna Woods A B C * , Anna Janssen D , Samantha Robertson A B , Clare Morgan C , Kerryn Butler-Henderson E , Andrew Burton-Jones F and Clair Sullivan A B GA
B
C
D
E
F
G
Australian Health Review 47(5) 553-558 https://doi.org/10.1071/AH23142
Submitted: 24 July 2023 Accepted: 4 September 2023 Published: 25 September 2023
Abstract
Digital health technologies are a proposed solution to improve healthcare delivery and reduce pressures on the healthcare system, but these technologies are new to much of the health workforce. This perspective paper highlights lessons learned from the global experience of rapid digital transformation of health workforces, including fostering a culture of learning, ensuring accreditation and recognition, and adopting a transdisciplinary approach. Evidence-based actions are proposed to address recommendations to (1) ensure foundational workforce digital health capability and (2) build specialist digital health career pathways. Australia must take a national approach and strategically leverage strong collaborations across sectors including healthcare, education and government to ensure a consistent, regulated and sustainable digital workforce capability.
Keywords: capability, clinical informatics, digital, digital health, education, employee, health workforce, medical informatics, skills, training, workforce planning.
Introduction
Australian healthcare workers face multiple, simultaneous pressures: rising demand for care, rising complexity of needs, budget pressures, new models of care and rapid digital disruption.1 If used effectively, the digital disruption imposed by technologies such as electronic medical records (EMR), virtual care and artificial intelligence offers opportunities to improve outcomes and strengthen health systems.2 The digital health capability of healthcare workers is an essential component to the adoption of these technologies to ensure the delivery of high-quality patient care (Box 1). This perspective paper aims to identify existing strategies for enhancing workforce capability in digital health and outline strategy-to-action recommendations to address this critical shortfall in Australia.
Box 1.Definitions and key concepts |
Clinical Informatics is the practice of analysing, designing, implementing, and evaluating information and communication systems that enhance individual and population health outcomes, improve patient care, and strengthen the clinician-patient relationship.3 |
Digital health capability refers to the ability of the healthcare workforce to confidently use technologies to respond to the needs of consumers now and into the future.1 |
Clinical Informaticians are professionals with relevant skills and experience who have a specialist digital health role.1 |
Healthcare workforce refers to ‘all individuals who deliver or assist in the delivery of health services or support the operation of health care facilities’ including health professionals such as nurses, doctors, allied health and extends to all other workers such as administrative assistants and technology professionals.4 |
Digital health workforce can be defined as the workforce tasked with analysing, designing, developing, implementing, maintaining, operating, evaluating, and governing the formats, technologies, systems, and services that mobilise health data, information, and knowledge.5 |
The need for upskilling the healthcare workforce with digital skills6,7 is well known, and while work has begun,8,9 progress has been slow. The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic and the associated rapid and forced adoption of digital health technologies10 has further highlighted the crucial need for education and training. The Australian National Digital Health Strategy outlines plans to implement digital health, with state and federal governments continuing to make significant investments in digital health systems.11 Australian general practices have been early adopters of computerised systems,12 however public and private hospitals are still on a journey to digitisation due to the complex implementation setting with legacy systems and inter-related services. An overview of large-scale digital health implementations is provided in Table 1, acknowledging the rapidly changing landscape.
State/context | EMR | Implementation year | EMR details | |
---|---|---|---|---|
General practice13 | Best Practice; Medical Director; Communicare (Telstra Health); Zedmed | Various | Three most used clinical information systems (Medical Director, Best Practice and Zedmed) have an estimated 90% coverage in Australian general practice. | |
NSW14 | Electronic Medical Record 2 (eMR2) | 2013 | EMR first implemented in 2007 (limited functionality). eMR2 staged rollout of functionality from 2013 to 2015. Planned statewide single digital patient record with Epic. | |
Vic.15,16 | Various EMRs | 2016 | Health services can choose their own EMR vendor, which must meet standard guidelines for applications and interoperability. Cerner EMR implemented at Alfred Health in 2016, Calvary Health uses Vitro, and Royal Children’s Hospital Melbourne has Epic as a vendor. A new system for health information exchange has been proposed for Victoria in 2023. | |
WA17,18 | Limited EMRs | 2016 | Digital Medical Record (BossNet Core Medical Solutions) first implemented at Fiona Stanley Hospital in 2016 followed by Fremantle hospital. Investment in 2020 to build statewide integrated EMR system. | |
Qld19 | Integrated Electronic Medical Record (ieMR) | 2017 | Statewide integrated system with Cerner vendor. First implemented 2017 at Princess Alexandra Hospital, Brisbane. | |
SA20 | Sunrise EMR | 2019 | State based EMR system first implemented in 2019 with ongoing rollout to health services across South Australia. | |
NT21,22 | Acacia | 2022 | Acacia is a single, territory-wide electronic patient record implemented in 2022. Acacia EMR vendor is InterSystems TrakCare. | |
ACT23 | Digital Health Record (DHR) | 2022 | Digital Health Record system went live November 2022. Statewide integrated system between all ACT public health services with Epic vendor. | |
Tas.24 | Nil | – | Recent investment to implement an integrated statewide system in the next 4 years. Digital medical record (electronic filing system) implemented in 2006. |
Digital health workforce challenges
Worldwide, digital literacy of healthcare workers remains an issue25 and many healthcare workers are unprepared to leverage the true advantages of digital health technologies.26,27 The majority of the current workforce were never trained in digital healthcare28,29 and, with limited opportunities for upskilling, most attempts to address this capability gap involve reactive, brief and inadequate on-the-job training.30
Digital health is not routinely included in undergraduate degrees for healthcare workers27,31 fuelled by the absence of digital health capabilities in professional accreditation standards.32,33 The current medical accreditation framework omits digital health capability,34 and digital health is seen as a major gap in accreditation and competency frameworks for the allied health professions.35 The nursing profession has the national informatics accreditation standards,9 recommending digital health training within undergraduate programs, although adherence to this recommendation is unknown.
Insufficient value has been placed on building a readily recognisable, professional, specialised healthcare workforce to manage and govern digital health.36 There are no nationally-agreed pathways for specialised digital health roles and formal qualifications are lacking in Australia.29,33,37 Currently, only specialist non-clinical roles such as health information management are recognised.38 Broad roles and associated functions have been outlined in the Role Profiles Framework,4 and an action plan was recently developed,1 however without a formalised and agreed position description, almost anyone can claim to be an expert in digital health.
Digital health workforce strategies
Specialised informatics training pathways and certifications are observable advancements internationally. In the USA, more than 50 accredited university programs provide clinical informatics fellowship training for physicians39 and certification for nursing informatics specialists is also available.40 In the UK, the Topol Digital Fellowship Programme and Digital Pioneer Fellowship41 offer professionals from clinical and non-clinical backgrounds advanced education for specialised qualifications in digital health.
In Australia, there has been a combined effort in developing strategies to build digital health workforce capacity4 (Box 2).
Box 2.Sample Australian workforce strategies |
The Australian Health Informatics Competency Framework42 by the Australian Institute of Digital Health (AIDH) provides contemporary guidelines and consensus on the competency domains for clinical informaticians in Australia. |
The Capability Framework for Digital Health in Medicine43 by the Australian Medical Council highlights the fundamental requisite of a digitally capable medical workforce. |
The National Nursing and Midwifery Digital Health Capability Framework44 by the AIDH in partnership with the national nursing and medical colleges, outlines the core skills, knowledge and behaviours required for professional practice. |
Jurisdiction-level capability frameworks to upskill both the current and future workforce with digital skills, often via collaboration between universities and state health departments.45,46 The Digital Health Cooperative Research Centre’s (DHCRC) Education and Capability Program supports the operationalisation of these frameworks. |
Lessons learned
Several lessons learned have been identified in the literature.
Embedding training and support in digital capability at all levels of the health system is seen as a high priority worldwide.4,10,27,41 Traditional models of ‘train once’ education are no longer fit for purpose in an evolving digitally-enabled healthcare environment.47 Education needs a continuous, lifelong learning approach with dynamic and tailored learning experiences, requiring collaboration from all sectors and national professional bodies.4 Novel, flexible, agile training opportunities are essential,4,41 enabling responsive training opportunities (e.g. micro-credentialling) that can help enhance sustainability.
Australia can learn from the USA, where formal training of clinical informaticians is offered as a fellowship program for doctors in their speciality training.48,49 Board certification by an accredited body ensures recognition of qualifications. Despite the UK also offering a fellowship program, this is not embedded in an academic framework or accreditation platform and therefore the program struggles with scale and credibility. Australia offers a growing number of digital health post-graduate coursework qualifications50–52 but there is a need to develop a specialist digital health accreditation system to sustain professional legitimacy.
Clinical informatics is a transdisciplinary profession.37 Strategies and programs rely on collaborations between sectors as well as ongoing flexibility and innovation.41 Despite this, in the USA certification pathways have developed independently for each discipline.53,54 The UK offers an interprofessional approach to education and training through the Topol Fellowship program.55 Program evaluation highlighted the poor representation of nursing staff in comparison to workforce numbers with nursing contribution considered vital in digital health leadership.56 With diversity in the specialised digital health workforce across roles and people,1,11 training needs to extend beyond healthcare professionals to data scientists, computer scientists, engineers and bioinformaticians.41
Strategy to action – recommendations
Although strategic guidelines exist, building digital health workforce capability in Australia’s healthcare and education sectors remains an ongoing challenge. Translating lessons learned into workforce initiatives is the next step. The following recommendations require the health sector, education sector and professional bodies to take measures to ensure the successful digital transformation of the health workforce. The future of the healthcare workforce relies on this convergence of sectors and it is fundamental to recognise this opportunity.1
Evidence-based actions include:
Professional accreditation1 requirement to incorporate digital health into undergraduate health degree curriculums based on standardised capability and competency frameworks
Adaptive digital health curriculums that can evolve in response to the emergence of novel technologies, changing workforce needs and learner feedback4
Multi-disciplinary team learning to enable staff across disciplines to adopt new technologies and lead to sustainable change41
An example education program embedded in a health service is provided in Box 3.
Box 3.Example workforce training program |
In response to the growing need for workforce training, the Queensland Digital Academy opened in 2019 within the Clinical Skills Development Service at the Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital Campus, offering a centrally coordinated hub for staff training in digital healthcare across the state.4,46 The specially fitted training rooms help target new technology implementations such as the integrated electronic medical record. |
Aim: The Academy offers support for digital health capability, leadership and digital transformation across Queensland Health. |
Considerations: In addition to hands-on training, the Academy also supports the academic-led Queensland Digital Health Grand Rounds and Journal Clubs, providing an opportunity for virtual attendees to network with colleagues interested in health informatics and research from all over Queensland. |
Evidence-based actions include:
Standardised national post-graduate clinical informatics competencies4
Defined career pathways for clinical informaticians including recognition of digital health as an occupational group1,4
Programs with a focus on transformational change, including navigating the workforce through changes to tasks, functions and new ways of working1
Accreditation of post-graduate clinical informatics by professional bodies1
A specialised post-graduate digital health workforce initiative is provided in Box 4.
Box 4.Example specialised training program |
The AIDH, in partnership with the DHCRC, is currently developing a Clinical Informatics Fellowship program, an internationally recognised program for healthcare staff to develop specialised knowledge across the areas of digital technology in healthcare, leadership and service innovation.42 |
Aim: To provide a combined academic and applied pathway for the development of the next generation of digital health leaders and opportunity for accreditation as an AIDH Clinical Informatics Fellow. |
Considerations: Development of the fellowship program should consider key aspects such as accreditation and a transdisciplinary approach, providing flexible opportunities and supporting a culture of learning at all levels. |
Conclusion
Education of the health workforce is necessary to realise the benefits of digital transformations, but implementation is challenging internationally. Australia can strategically leverage strong collaborations across sectors including healthcare, education and government to ensure a consistent, regulated and sustainable national approach to digital workforce capability. This will ensure the healthcare workforce is adequately equipped with the necessary skills and knowledge to meet the increasing demands of contemporary healthcare delivery.
References
3 Gardner RM, Overhage JM, Steen EB, et al. Core content for the subspecialty of clinical informatics. J Am Med Inform Assoc 2009; 16: 153-157.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |
6 Carlile S, Sefton AJ. Healthcare and the information age: implications for medical education. Med J Aust 1998; 168: 340-343.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |
7 Coiera E. Medical informatics meets medical education. Med J Aust 1998; 168: 319-320.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |
9 Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation. ANMF National informatics standards for nurses and midwives. Melbourne: ANMF Federal Office; 2015. Available at https://www.anmf.org.au/media/kgdb4ozx/national_informatics_standards_for_nurses_and_midwives.pdf
10 Chen Y, Banerjee A. Improving the digital health of the workforce in the COVID-19 context: an opportunity to future-proof medical training. Future Healthc J 2020; 7: 189-192.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |
12 Henderson J, Britt H, Miller G. Extent and utilisation of computerisation in Australian general practice. Med J Aust 2006; 185: 84-87.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |
14 eHealth NSW. Electronic Medical Record (eMR). 2022. Available at https://www.ehealth.nsw.gov.au/solutions/clinical-care/electronic-medical-records/emr [accessed 9 September 2022].
15 Department of Health. Clinical Information System and Electronic Medical Record application and interoperability standard. 2022. Available at https://www.health.vic.gov.au/digital-health/clinical-information-system-and-electronic-medical-record-application-and [accessed 9 September 2022].
19 Queensland Health. Integrated electronic medical record (ieMR). 2019. Available at https://www.health.qld.gov.au/clinical-practice/innovation/digital-health-initiatives/queensland/integrated-electronic-medical-record-iemr [accessed 9 September 2022].
20 Government of South Australia. Sunrise EMR & PAS, SA Health’s electronic medical record. 2022. Available at https://www.sahealth.sa.gov.au/wps/wcm/connect/public+content/sa+health+internet/clinical+resources/clinical+information+systems/sunrise+emr+pas/sunrise+emr+pas+sa+healths+electronic+medical+record [accessed 9 September 2022].
21 Northern Territory Government. Core Clinical Systems Renewal Program (CCSRP). 2017. Available at https://health.nt.gov.au/professionals/core-clinical-systems-renewal-program-ccsrp [accessed 9 September 2022].
22 Northern Territory Government. New patient health system for our hospitals. 2022. Available at https://dcdd.nt.gov.au/news/2022/new-patient-health-system-for-our-hospitals [accessed 9 September 2022].
23 ACT Government. Digital Health Record. 2022. https://www.health.act.gov.au/digital/dhr [accessed 9 September 2022].
25 Mather CA, Cheng C, Douglas T, et al. eHealth Literacy of Australian Undergraduate Health Profession Students: A Descriptive Study. Int J Environ Res Public Health 2022; 19: 10751.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |
26 Mollart L, Newell R, Noble D, et al. Nursing undergraduates’ perception of preparedness using patient electronic medical records in clinical practice. Aust J Adv Nurs 2021; 38: 44-51.
| Crossref | Google Scholar |
27 Edirippulige S, Gong S, Hathurusinghe M, et al. Medical students’ perceptions and expectations regarding digital health education and training: a qualitative study. J Telemed Telecare 2022; 28: 258-265.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |
28 Butler-Henderson K, Gray K, Pearce C, et al. Exploring the health informatics occupational group in the 2018 Australian health information workforce census. Stud Health Technol Inform 2019; 266: 44-50.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |
30 Younge VL, Borycki EM, Kushniruk AW. On-the-job training of health professionals for electronic health record and electronic medical record use: A scoping review. Knowl Manage E-Learn 2015; 7: 436-469.
| Google Scholar |
31 Harerimana A, Wicking K, Biedermann N, et al. Nursing informatics in undergraduate nursing education in Australia before COVID-19: A scoping review. Collegian 2021; 29: 527-539.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |
32 Dattakumar A, Gray K, Butler-Henderson K, et al. We are not educating the future clinical health professional workforce adequately for e-health competence: findings of an Australian study. In: Maeder AJ, Martin‐Sanchez FJ, editors. Health Informatics: Building a Healthcare Future Through Trusted Information. IOS Press; 2012. pp. 33–38.
33 Edirippulige S, Brooks P, Carati C, et al. It’s important, but not important enough: eHealth as a curriculum priority in medical education in Australia. J Telemed Telecare 2018; 24: 697-702.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |
34 Australian Medical Council Limited. Review of Accreditation Standards for Primary Medical Programs (medical schools). 2022. Available at https://www.amc.org.au/review-of-accreditation-standards-for-primary-medical-programs-medical-schools/ [accessed 24 January 2023].
35 Butler-Henderson K, Dalton L, Probst Y, et al. A meta-synthesis of competency standards suggest allied health are not preparing for a digital health future. Int J Med Inform 2020; 144: 104296.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |
39 American Medical Informatics Association. Informatics Academic Programs. 2022. Available at https://amia.org/careers-certifications/informatics-academic-programs [accessed 21 June 2022].
40 American Nurses Credentialing Center. Informatics Nursing Board Certification Examination; Maryland, USA. 2018. Available at https://www.nursingworld.org/our-certifications/informatics-nurse/
45 Brunner M, McGregor D, Keep M, et al. An eHealth capabilities framework for graduates and health professionals: mixed-methods study. J Med Internet Res 2018; 20: e10229.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |
47 Platt JE, Raj M, Wienroth M. An analysis of the learning health system in its first decade in practice: scoping review. J Med Internet Res 2020; 22: e17026.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |
49 Emergency Medicine Residents’ Association. EMRA Fellowship Guide, 2nd edn; 2021. Available at https://www.emra.org/books/fellowship-guide-book/informatics/ [accessed 21 June 2022].
50 The University of Queensland. Graduate Certificate in Clinical Informatics and Digital Health. 2022. Available at https://study.uq.edu.au/study-options/programs/graduate-certificate-clinical-informatics-and-digital-health-5729#entry-requirements [accessed 23 June 2022].
51 RMIT online. Graduate Certificate in Digital Health; 2023. Available at https://online.rmit.edu.au/course/pg-graduate-certificate-digital-health-gc191 [accessed 5 June 2023].
52 La Trobe University. Master of Digital Health. 2023. Available at https://landing.onlinecourses.latrobe.edu.au/digital-health/?utm_source=Google&utm_medium=SEARCH_PPC&utm_campaign=LTU_MDH&utm_term=masters%20in%20digital%20health&utm_content=146823425888&gad=1&gclid=Cj0KCQjw7PCjBhDwARIsANo7Cgmmxm33NXH03vdq-1LDTWoeGqxWmhh68RUZiWfahy4tKbwgH3J1wtcaAl3FEALw_wcB [accessed 5 June 2023].
53 Detmer DE, Munger BS, Lehmann CU. Clinical informatics board certification: history, current status, and predicted impact on the clinical informatics workforce. Appl Clin Inform 2010; 1: 11-18.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |
54 Cummins MR, Gundlapalli AV, Murray P, et al. Nursing informatics certification worldwide: history, pathway, roles, and motivation. Yearb Med Inform 2016; 25: 264-271.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |
55 Health Education England NHS. Topol Digital Fellowships. 2019–2021. Available at https://topol.hee.nhs.uk/digital-fellowships/ [accessed 21 June 2022].
56 Robbins T, Kyrou I, Arvanitis TN, et al. Topol digital fellowship aspirants: Understanding the motivations, priorities and experiences of the next generation of digital health leaders. Future Healthc J 2022; 9: 51-56.
| Crossref | Google Scholar | PubMed |