and applying the knowledge in support of the communities they serve. Andrew Hamilton, RN, CIO and deputy director of AllianceChicago, and his team have, for example, partnered with the National Association of Community Health Centers to develop a tool called PRAPARE, which is used by most of the CHCs across the U.S.

spoke with Hamilton to discuss a variety of issues from which all provider organizations can learn. We talked about how healthcare information technology helps foster equity, the role of healthcare-generated data in supporting public health surveillance, and the collection and use of social care needs data. The IOM [now the National Academy of Medicine] outlined six domains of quality in healthcare, where health information technology can play a key role: safe, effective, patient-centered, timely, efficient and equitable.

including (but not limited to) access to the internet/broadband services, affordability of technology services and tools, language accessibility features (beyond English and Spanish), and digital and health literacy. The COVID pandemic highlighted several opportunities to strengthen both our healthcare delivery system and our public health infrastructure. With respect to surveillance, the public health system in the U.

S. was largely informed by vital records (birth/death certificates, mandatory case reports, laboratory data), survey data (consumers, healthcare providers, insurance companies), environmental monitoring (water and air quality), and .