When President Obama signed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) into law, health IT
was catapulted into a new era. I believe this is — and forever will be — the biggest milestone in the history of health IT. I’d like to share my perspectives on it, but it will take several blog posts to cover such a big topic. Today, I’ll start with a high level view of the significance of this event, and talk about some of the confusion that has resulted from the injection of so much new money – and with it, some new politics – into the world of health IT. Then I’ll follow up with posts that delve into the details of how I believe CCHIT will need to evolve in this new environment.
I’m personally struck by the parallels to a historical event still vivid in my memory: Project Apollo, President Kennedy’s incredible national goal of achieving manned spaceflight to the moon.
Apollo cost $22B (in 1969 dollars, now worth five times that) and took 8 years to achieve the first moonwalk. NASA, a new government agency, spearheaded the effort, but the technology was developed by private sector contractors.