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Survey: Healthcare IT Trends to Watch in 2024.

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Software development firm Auvik surveyed over 2000 IT professionals to report on current trends in healthcare IT. Auvik concluded that automation is the theme for this year’s trends report.


On Monday, June 24, Canadian cloud-based IT management platform Auvik released its nine healthcare IT trends to watch this year. For its report, Auvik surveyed over 2000 IT professionals, including CEOs, system administrators, and operations managers. Auvik representatives recently spoke about the survey’s outcomes.

Based on the survey responses, the executive summary indicated that automation was a key trend. “Automation can contribute to a better end-user experience,” the report stated. Another highlight mentioned in the summary was that “there is a gap between the experiences of IT operations personnel on the front lines and what their management perceives.”

Alex Hoff, founder and CSO of Auvik, was not particularly surprised by the survey responses. However, Hoff said there is more sensitivity around data in the healthcare field. Auvik’s Bob Wientzen, senior manager of global communications, indicated that the findings of the survey confirmed some of the known key trends. The difficulty companies are having is around hiring, as well as the need to find third parties for outsourcing, Wientzen added.

“Security is still top of mind,” Hoff said when asked about differences between the current survey results and last year’s. “People want to do projects to drive automation and leverage third parties but are being challenged by getting the monies to do so.”

“I think a lot of people struggle with shadow IT,” Hoff noted. The concern with this is the security aspect. “Project management teams use mirror boards to do collaboration.” There is sensitive data there, Hoff pointed out.

The top findings from the survey were:

Regarding outsourcing, Hoff thinks more people should embrace it. “I’m very pro-focusing on your core competencies,” Hoff remarked. If you want to do in-house training, that’s your choice. However, that doesn’t make sense at scale, he remarked.

Even though the trend is still working on-site for the healthcare sector, “More and more people are telecommuting,” Hoff said. “Those resources are in the cloud.” How do you get visibility to trusted data such as medical imaging and patient records? Hoff asked. “With more people embracing the flexibility of working remotely post-pandemic, we do see an impact.” People are still relying on legacy infrastructure VPNs and insecure technologies. With so many vulnerabilities, organizations want to know how to do this differently. “How do we give the doctors and the imaging specialists the flexibility to work remotely but also maintain a secure performance experience for them?” This is more a theme than a trend, Hoff indicated.

“SaaS visibility runs a little bit lower in the healthcare IT industry than it does in other industries,” Wientzen highlighted.

“The world has embraced the cloud,” Hoff remarked. “It is easy to centralize the management….as long as you don’t let people into the front door through bad passwords and not using Multifactor Authentication (MFA).” It’s obvious to utilize MFA, Hoff stated. It’s also apparent you should back up your network, he added.

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