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August 2016

Policy&Practice

27

I

n virtually every industry, there is demand for faster and

more nimble approaches to information technology (IT)

transformation. Take the auto industry where, according

to a 2013

Harvard Business Review

article, the typical

automotive design cycle had shortened to just 24–36

months; five years earlier this same cycle took 60 months.

1

The impetus for change in the automobile industry

seems fairly obvious; car makers had to keep up with

customer demands for better, more efficient, and more

technologically advanced cars so they sped up innova-

tion cycles. Taxpayers and recipients of public services, including

health and social service programs, have the same expectations. Yet

government, and particularly the health and social service agencies

and the vendor community that serves them, sometimes may make

it appear that we are still acting like it is 1999. However, the tired

attempts to rip-and-replace siloed systems with yet another mono-

lithic transfer system are coming to an end.

A variety of forces is demanding this change. First, the speed

and level of technical innovation are simply mind blowing. Second,

the pace of regulatory change has never been faster. The Health

Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act, the

Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010, the enhanced

federal financial participation (FFP) for Medicaidmodernization, the

time-limited Office of Management Budget A-87 cost allocation waiver,

and the newly adopted Comprehensive ChildWelfare Information

System rule, among other regulatory and funding changes, are both

encouraging—andmandating—that we do things differently.

Despite some great successes in the industry, there have been

simply too many costly failures and modernization efforts that do

little more than re-platform antiquated legacy technology (and

the associated business processes that go with them). Often these

projects take too long, cost too much, and make only moderate

improvements in the efficiency or effectiveness of case practice if

they reach production at all.

There are signs, though, that the industry is quite rightfully moving

toward a more nimble approach to IT transformation. When viewing

the business and IT environment through the lens of the capabilities

needed to support a new business model, technology becomes the

solution enabler, not the solution itself. The initiatives taking such

a view typically leverage a more incremental approach to planning

and an agile development approach to deliver results quicker, help

mitigate risk, and allow strategy adaptation, if needed, mid-stream.

As is often the case with large-scale change, the temptation could

be for the pendulum to swing too far the other way. Indeed, an

“agile” approach that does not include a clear roadmap for reaching

the desired end state, or that fails to account for realities such as the

length of a public procurement cycle, is likely destined to fail.

However, with a rather straightforward four-step planning

process that can be accomplished as quickly as 60 days, an agency

The world of health

and human services IT

Transformation is changing.

Illustration via Shutterstock