“The Health and Human Services Department awarded $73 million in cooperative agreements and grants to increase the number of IT specialists working in health care and ensure the health care workforce has the training to keep up with innovations in the sector.”
“The funding is part of $80 million given to HHS as part of the second pandemic stimulus package—the American Rescue Plan—set aside for the Public Health Informatics and Technology Workforce Development Program, or PHIT. The program is being administered by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT, or ONC, which Wednesday announced 10 awards focused on bringing more minority and underserved communities into health IT.”
“’We’re excited to hit the ground running to develop a continuous pipeline of diverse public health information technology professionals,’ National Coordinator for Health IT Micky Tripathi said in a statement. ‘It’s critical that we quickly identify and educate individuals from diverse backgrounds in public health, informatics and data science to cultivate a robust, sustainable public health workforce.'”
“With that in mind, the program sought out partners at Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Hispanic Serving Institutions, Asian American and Native American Pacific Islander-Serving Institutions and other minority-serving institutions.”
“ONC officials initially planned to award up to $75 million—with $5 million reserved for program administration—for up to 30 projects. After three months of sifting through project proposals, the team chose 10 awardees…” Read the full article here.
Source: 10 Universities Picked to Help HHS Build Up Health IT Workforce – By Aaron Boyd, September 22, 2021. Nextgov.




