
CHIME Fall Forum 21 – Chero Goswami, CIO of UW (Wisconsin) Health
About This Episode
Chero Goswami, CIO of University of Wisconsin shares his experience of taking over as CIO as the pandemic emerges.
Transcript
Bill Russell 00:00:03 Today in health, it interviews from the chime Bill Russell 00:00:05 conference in San Diego. Bill Russell 00:00:07 My name is bill Russell. Bill Russell 00:00:08 I'm a former CIO for a 16 hospital system and creator of this week in health. Bill Russell 00:00:11 It a channel dedicated to keeping health it staff current and engaged. Bill Russell 00:00:16 Just a quick reminder. Bill Russell 00:00:17 I wouldn't be dropping interviews over the next couple of days and into Bill Russell 00:00:20 next week from the chime conference. Bill Russell 00:00:23 And then I'm going to have some more interviews from the next conference I Bill Russell 00:00:27 want to be going to, and then eventually I'll get back to Florida and to the studio Bill Russell 00:00:32 where we'll start looking at the news. Bill Russell 00:00:33 Once again. Bill Russell 00:00:34 Hope you enjoy this interview. Bill Russell 00:00:36 All right. Bill Russell 00:00:36 Another interview from the floor of China, we have chiro Goswami CIO Bill Russell 00:00:41 for university of Wisconsin health. Bill Russell 00:00:43 You're at Madison. Bill Russell 00:00:44 That's right, Sarah. Bill Russell 00:00:45 Wow. Bill Russell 00:00:46 Congratulations. Bill Russell 00:00:46 Well, we met each other. Bill Russell 00:00:47 You were at BJC. Bill Russell 00:00:48 That's right. Bill Russell 00:00:49 Gosh, I just had a Donald. Bill Russell 00:00:52 And I said, you know, we met at, at, uh, epi, just what were you doing Chero Goswami 00:00:55 at BJC? Chero Goswami 00:00:56 So it was one of the vice-presidents at BJC by last stint over there Chero Goswami 00:00:59 was leading the epic implementation and doing some strategic. Bill Russell 00:01:03 Yeah. Bill Russell 00:01:04 And she commented on how, uh, fun it is to have an epic implementation across two. Bill Russell 00:01:10 I mean, it's an academic medical center, but across to. Bill Russell 00:01:13 I forgot what you called Chero Goswami 00:01:14 it. Chero Goswami 00:01:14 It's two different legal entities who legal and different legal Chero Goswami 00:01:16 entities, the health system, and the university of Washington Chero Goswami 00:01:19 universities, the academic part, Bill Russell 00:01:20 and doing an EMR implementation is challenging Bill Russell 00:01:23 at an academic medical center. Bill Russell 00:01:24 But when you add even more complexity audit, I can only, Chero Goswami 00:01:27 I used to have hair as I joked before I did Bill Russell 00:01:29 that. Bill Russell 00:01:29 So, um, but, but you guys earned your stripes. Bill Russell 00:01:33 You, you, you know, and both of you have gone on to CIO. Bill Russell 00:01:36 So tell us about the journey I do. Bill Russell 00:01:39 How did you, uh, make that move? Bill Russell 00:01:41 How'd you make that. Chero Goswami 00:01:42 Well, first I'll say BJC is a great, great place to work. Chero Goswami 00:01:45 And working with Washington university learned a lot and it's Chero Goswami 00:01:48 like, they see it just by parents, raise your kids and then send them Chero Goswami 00:01:50 off to college for greater things. Chero Goswami 00:01:52 And that's how I feel. Chero Goswami 00:01:54 I gave them to a university of Wisconsin and Madison. Chero Goswami 00:01:57 So I got there January of 2020 right before COVID came in and thank goodness Chero Goswami 00:02:02 for some good coaches and mentors at BJC and other places, uh, putting Chero Goswami 00:02:06 all those learnings to use everyday Bill Russell 00:02:09 while. Bill Russell 00:02:09 So you came in. Bill Russell 00:02:11 So. Chero Goswami 00:02:12 Post pandemic. Chero Goswami 00:02:13 So technically I started gen six, which is the first day that the Chero Goswami 00:02:16 first case of, uh, COVID actually happened in the United States. Chero Goswami 00:02:20 So Madison Gossett's first case with the end of February. Bill Russell 00:02:24 So how do you come up to speed? Bill Russell 00:02:26 I mean, you come in, it's like, Hey, welcome. Bill Russell 00:02:29 We appreciate you coming in here. Bill Russell 00:02:31 And oh, by the way, we need to prepare for this. Bill Russell 00:02:34 And then like, I assume like a month or two later, it's like, Bill Russell 00:02:37 Hey, everybody's going home. Bill Russell 00:02:38 We need to do all these things. Bill Russell 00:02:39 I mean, you don't have. Bill Russell 00:02:42 Background, you really have to Chero Goswami 00:02:43 rely on your people. Chero Goswami 00:02:44 I would imagine. Chero Goswami 00:02:44 So bill, you and I have worked before, so, you know, my style, Chero Goswami 00:02:47 you know, it's a good thing. Chero Goswami 00:02:48 Every, every challenge is an opportunity. Chero Goswami 00:02:50 So when it came to the pandemic, there was no textbook written. Chero Goswami 00:02:53 So nobody could tell you there's a different way of doing these things. Chero Goswami 00:02:56 So it's actually worked out to be a blessing because as we all know, Chero Goswami 00:03:00 healthcare is resistant to change. Chero Goswami 00:03:02 So pandemic presented that opportunity where we could just try new things, uh, Chero Goswami 00:03:07 without the fear of failure, knowing that the alternative was always worse. Chero Goswami 00:03:11 The organization welcomed me the thoughts. Chero Goswami 00:03:13 I had a great, still have a great team to work with. Chero Goswami 00:03:15 So it turned out to be a very good opportunity to drive value Chero Goswami 00:03:21 enablement and innovation into that Bill Russell 00:03:23 culture. Bill Russell 00:03:24 You know, when, when I, I always ask CIO is what was your a hundred day plan? Bill Russell 00:03:28 And that kind of stuff. Bill Russell 00:03:29 When we do the longer form interviews and they share them, and a lot Bill Russell 00:03:32 of them are, you know, I try to meet and talk to everybody on my. Bill Russell 00:03:37 Were you able to do that? Bill Russell 00:03:37 Were you able to make those kinds of connections? Bill Russell 00:03:39 So, Chero Goswami 00:03:39 no. Chero Goswami 00:03:40 No. Chero Goswami 00:03:40 I mean, that's one thing I say COVID told for me because I'm a Chero Goswami 00:03:43 very relationship based person and I call them meet and greets. Chero Goswami 00:03:47 And, uh, it's funny because even now I show appointments on my calendar, it Chero Goswami 00:03:50 says meet and greet revision, number 17, like, you know, or something like that. Chero Goswami 00:03:55 The good thing though is, um, we were still meeting, uh, in Chero Goswami 00:03:58 the first six or eight weeks. Chero Goswami 00:04:00 So I got some time to set those relationships, but over a period of time, Chero Goswami 00:04:04 Again, virtual meetings became efficient, uh, and more convenient in some ways. Bill Russell 00:04:09 So it's so you, it's interesting. Bill Russell 00:04:13 Cause you talked about the fact that, you know, the, the, the pandemic created Bill Russell 00:04:17 some interesting situations and for you, you never got used to working Bill Russell 00:04:21 in the office with all these people. Bill Russell 00:04:23 Not until I know there's a lot of CEOs are talking about the transition Bill Russell 00:04:26 and how it's been difficult. Bill Russell 00:04:27 Cause they, they had a one way of working and now they're doing another, Bill Russell 00:04:30 you came in and had to start with. Bill Russell 00:04:33 I mean, pretty Chero Goswami 00:04:33 much a new way of marketing, so very much. Chero Goswami 00:04:35 So we have a pretty big building in one of the suburbs of Madison Chero Goswami 00:04:38 Middleton where it seats about 450, uh, team members, uh, ISS about six 50. Chero Goswami 00:04:44 And I still go into work three or four days a week and meet a few people. Chero Goswami 00:04:48 But, uh, pretty much it was a ghost town. Chero Goswami 00:04:51 It was a ghost town. Chero Goswami 00:04:52 So Bill Russell 00:04:54 you're, you're in the shadow of, of epic. Bill Russell 00:04:57 I assume you have some former African people. Chero Goswami 00:04:59 We do have some former epic employees and epic in your w Chero Goswami 00:05:04 health have a long, long relationship. Chero Goswami 00:05:05 In many ways epic was installed at UWO health. Bill Russell 00:05:08 I, you know, there's part of me that wants to ask questions, but Bill Russell 00:05:11 I won't do that to you on the thing. Bill Russell 00:05:12 He's like, you know, do you ever like go over and just knock on Judy store Bill Russell 00:05:15 and say, Hey, can you come on over? Bill Russell 00:05:16 And, um, and I would imagine that has its pluses and minuses Bill Russell 00:05:19 being in their backyard. Chero Goswami 00:05:21 Absolutely. Chero Goswami 00:05:22 Well, I'll tell you one of the reasons I took the, I took the possession now over Chero Goswami 00:05:26 there, I talked to a few epic leaders before I took the position because it's Chero Goswami 00:05:29 also an opportunity to do some very innovative, uh, joint collaboration work. Chero Goswami 00:05:33 And so we are exploring and working on some of Bill Russell 00:05:35 those things. Bill Russell 00:05:36 Talk to me about an innovation. Bill Russell 00:05:37 So your chief information officer, um, how does your digital and innovation work at? Bill Russell 00:05:43 Okay. Chero Goswami 00:05:44 So again, if I don't think the world has defined a very. Chero Goswami 00:05:47 Demarcation between the word technology and digital. Chero Goswami 00:05:50 I mean, everything is called digital nowadays. Chero Goswami 00:05:52 So I am the chief information officer for the digital program. Chero Goswami 00:05:56 I co-leading with a very dear close colleague of mine. Chero Goswami 00:05:59 She's the chief ambulatory officer. Chero Goswami 00:06:02 Uh, so on the digital aspect, we laid out the strategy in the last 12 months. Chero Goswami 00:06:06 Now we are starting to implement some of the things on the digital front Chero Goswami 00:06:08 door side, um, artificial intelligence and robotics process automation. Chero Goswami 00:06:14 On the innovation side. Chero Goswami 00:06:15 It's interesting. Chero Goswami 00:06:15 A less known fact is UWO health also has an innovation arm or Chero Goswami 00:06:20 venture capital arm called isthmus. Chero Goswami 00:06:22 And we have a chief innovation officer over there. Chero Goswami 00:06:24 Who's also a very good partner and I sat on the board. Chero Goswami 00:06:27 So as long as the three partners work together among other Chero Goswami 00:06:30 things, um, things get done. Chero Goswami 00:06:32 It doesn't matter what the label of the, uh, Bill Russell 00:06:34 thesis areas for innovation. Chero Goswami 00:06:37 Um, part of it is actually. Chero Goswami 00:06:40 As simple as I, Jonathan Fritz, who probably everybody knows is a Chero Goswami 00:06:44 it, the chief innovation officer here, Jonathan and I, Joe innovation Chero Goswami 00:06:48 is different than invention. Chero Goswami 00:06:50 Right? Chero Goswami 00:06:50 Innovation has to solve a problem. Chero Goswami 00:06:51 Innovation has to make something better. Chero Goswami 00:06:54 So when we think of innovation, we always look at what's the Chero Goswami 00:06:57 problem we are trying to solve. Chero Goswami 00:06:58 So again, for the rest of the other industries, that may not Chero Goswami 00:07:01 be innovation, but we are finding ways where we are using data as a Chero Goswami 00:07:05 currency, we are using information. Chero Goswami 00:07:07 Bring down our AR days. Chero Goswami 00:07:09 We are our prior auth and pieces like that, where technology is Chero Goswami 00:07:12 now becoming more of a revenue generator than anything else. Chero Goswami 00:07:16 So that's one very simple case of innovation, uh, in the world of Chero Goswami 00:07:20 artificial intelligence, we are using imaging and non-structure data, you Chero Goswami 00:07:24 know, to start creating data models. Chero Goswami 00:07:25 So that's another case of innovation, anything Bill Russell 00:07:28 in the area of, uh, Chero Goswami 00:07:30 Starting to explore. Chero Goswami 00:07:32 Uh, I'm assuming you mean RPAs and robotics process automation. Chero Goswami 00:07:35 We're starting to explore by choice. Chero Goswami 00:07:37 We are respecting the, the, the workforce shortages and all the Chero Goswami 00:07:41 challenges in the clinical areas. Chero Goswami 00:07:43 So we're starting to look at nonclinical areas. Chero Goswami 00:07:45 Supply chain is one finance, HR recruitment, which everybody Chero Goswami 00:07:49 is struggling to recruit. Chero Goswami 00:07:50 Right now we are building an automated processes to reduce the turnaround times. Chero Goswami 00:07:54 So what's the Bill Russell 00:07:54 biggest difference between, um, BJC. Bill Russell 00:07:59 UWA. Bill Russell 00:07:59 I try to tell people it's like, you know, every academic medical Bill Russell 00:08:03 center is a little different. Bill Russell 00:08:04 Every IDN is a little different, every, I mean, what's, what's Bill Russell 00:08:08 the biggest difference that you Chero Goswami 00:08:08 found? Chero Goswami 00:08:09 Uh, on a humorous note, I would say is it's a lot more Chero Goswami 00:08:12 colder at UWL compared to BJC. Chero Goswami 00:08:15 Uh, other than that, I would say one big difference that I feel is, uh, Chero Goswami 00:08:19 what's typically known as the faculty practice plan it, most academic medical Chero Goswami 00:08:23 centers here, the faculty practice. Chero Goswami 00:08:25 It was very tightly integrated with the health system. Chero Goswami 00:08:27 So I have responsibilities for both the, the, the systems of the faculty practice Chero Goswami 00:08:31 plan rounds and, uh, the health system, Johns, which is very different than Chero Goswami 00:08:36 a BJC in wash WashU, other than epic. Chero Goswami 00:08:38 It's two totally different it shops. Chero Goswami 00:08:39 So that's a big, big difference. Chero Goswami 00:08:41 The Bill Russell 00:08:42 thing I found with academic medical centers, governance has Bill Russell 00:08:45 been wealth usually well thought out. Bill Russell 00:08:47 Um, in fact, I haven't even thought of, of an area, an academic Bill Russell 00:08:51 medical center I've gone into. Bill Russell 00:08:53 Hasn't really thought out there, their governance process really well. Bill Russell 00:08:55 Have you, have you found that to be so, Chero Goswami 00:08:57 um, I would say the governance structures in my Chero Goswami 00:09:00 experience are well-taught out of, but does it work all the time? Chero Goswami 00:09:03 Right? Chero Goswami 00:09:03 Tell me different things. Chero Goswami 00:09:04 And so I I'm on the philosophy that every governance structure should renew Chero Goswami 00:09:08 its license at the first of the year. Chero Goswami 00:09:10 Um, so with that in mind, we are actually recreating some of the Bill Russell 00:09:13 times Chero Goswami 00:09:14 that keep you from getting things done. Chero Goswami 00:09:15 Exactly, exactly. Chero Goswami 00:09:16 And so you use the thing though. Chero Goswami 00:09:18 I mean, think about Kobe and the decisions we made at two hours. Chero Goswami 00:09:22 Right. Chero Goswami 00:09:23 Why do we need another company to help us make those decisions? Bill Russell 00:09:26 So I'm trying to, I'm trying to find somebody who look, we Bill Russell 00:09:30 just, we all experienced code the same way we made decisions as quickly to Bill Russell 00:09:32 say by I'm trying to find somebody who said, yeah, look, we've looked at that Bill Russell 00:09:37 and said, we want to be like that more. Bill Russell 00:09:40 And they changed a bunch of their structure moving forward. Bill Russell 00:09:43 But what I'm finding is a lot of systems are just sort of slowly Bill Russell 00:09:46 leaning back into what they did. Chero Goswami 00:09:49 So I use a phrase. Chero Goswami 00:09:50 We at the crossroads of nostalgia and ambition, that's pretty much what it is. Chero Goswami 00:09:54 We want to be different, but it's our past that keeps pulling us back. Chero Goswami 00:09:58 And so one of my roles in being a new leader in the organization Chero Goswami 00:10:01 is to be the backstop room. Chero Goswami 00:10:03 Ask why, ask why the suspect tradition, but don't go into reverse gear. Chero Goswami 00:10:07 So, um, no that that's a challenging job, but I'll tell you for the Chero Goswami 00:10:11 right reasons when you show it works, people start believing in it. Chero Goswami 00:10:14 So, yeah. Bill Russell 00:10:15 Fantastic. Bill Russell 00:10:16 Sure. Chero Goswami 00:10:17 Thank you for your time. Chero Goswami 00:10:19 Thanks for having me over. Bill Russell 00:10:20 Don't forget to check back as we have more of these interviews Bill Russell 00:10:22 coming to you, that's all for today. Bill Russell 00:10:25 If you know of someone that might benefit from our channel, Bill Russell 00:10:26 please forward them a note. Bill Russell 00:10:27 They can subscribe on our website this week, health.com or wherever you listen Bill Russell 00:10:31 to podcasts, apple, Google, overcast, Spotify, Stitcher, you get the picture. Bill Russell 00:10:35 We are everywhere. Bill Russell 00:10:37 We want to thank our channel sponsors who are investing in our mission to Bill Russell 00:10:40 develop the next generation of health. Bill Russell 00:10:42 VMware Hill-Rom Starbridge advisors, McAfee and Aruba networks. Bill Russell 00:10:47 Thanks for listening.


