Page de couverture de Order of Operations: The Foundation Risk Healthcare AI Is Running Past | Lens Four by Sean Martin | Read by TAPE9

Order of Operations: The Foundation Risk Healthcare AI Is Running Past | Lens Four by Sean Martin | Read by TAPE9

Order of Operations: The Foundation Risk Healthcare AI Is Running Past | Lens Four by Sean Martin | Read by TAPE9

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Healthcare's AI ambition and its data infrastructure are moving at different speeds. In this edition of Lens Four, Sean Martin examines what happens when those speeds collide — and who is accountable when the sequence is wrong. 🔍 In this episode: 82% of health systems have limited or no AI governance in place, while deployments proceed — Digital Medicine Society58% of frontline clinical staff are using unsanctioned AI tools — not out of recklessness, but because approved alternatives don't exist — Wolters KluwerThe vendor trust gap: trusted vendors are shipping AI capabilities into integrated products after contracts are signed, after integrations are built, after due diligence has closed — and most health systems have no mechanism to detect itJason Kor of HITRUST on what procurement processes aren't built to catch — recorded for the Redefining CyberSecurity PodcastThe Stryker attack: a nation-state operation that disrupted hospitals through their supplier — not their own systemsRyan Patrick of HITRUST on why availability of services now sits in the same risk tier as confidentiality of dataWho actually owns the patient's data — the provider, the insurer, the vendor, the device manufacturer, the government program, or the patient?TEFCA — the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement — moves data nationally across eleven Qualified Health Information Networks. It does not move the ownership rights with itThe CMS agenda: $1.7 trillion, 160 million Americans, and a policy clock that does not wait for the identity infrastructure to catch upThe vocabulary of transformation — what "pilot to production" and "scale" are selecting for, and what they are leaving outZero Trust reframed as the infrastructure condition that makes trustworthy AI deployment possible — not just a ransomware defense Fourth Lens: Healthcare's AI ambition and its data infrastructure are moving at different speeds — and the patient is where those speeds collide. The program layer is making sequence choices. The market layer is accelerating pressure. The messaging layer is optimizing for ambition. None of it is an argument against innovation. All of it is an argument for discipline — A-to-Z, every dependency, ambiguity, and fragility along the way. 🎙️ Podcast conversations referenced in this article: Jason Kor, HITRUST — Brand SpotlightRyan Patrick, HITRUST — HIMSS Recap 🔗 Full article and references: seanmartin.com/lens-four 🌐 HIMSS26 coverage: itspmagazine.com Sean Martin is a cybersecurity market analyst, content strategist, and advisor with 30+ years across engineering, product development, marketing, and media. Co-founder of ITSPmagazine and Studio C60, host of the Redefining CyberSecurity Podcast and the Music Evolves Podcast. Connect at seanmartin.com. Subscribe to Lens Four — Where business, innovation, and messaging come into focus. 🎯 Keywords: healthcare AI governance, order of operations AI, data foundation healthcare, vendor trust gap, patient data ownership, TEFCA, health information exchange, QHINs, Shadow AI healthcare, third-party risk management, supply chain resilience healthcare, Zero Trust healthcare, CMS interoperability framework, CIA triad healthcare, data integrity AI, identity management healthcare, HITRUST, Jason Kor, Ryan Patrick, Wolters Kluwer, Digital Medicine Society, DiMe, Google for Health, Jon McNeill, John Halamka, Mayo Clinic Platform, Sumbul Ahmad Desai, Apple Health, Daymond John, Dr. Mehmet Oz, Amy Gleason, Kim Brandt, DOGE healthcare, Stryker cyberattack, nation-state healthcare attack, HIMSS26, Redefining CyberSecurity Podcast, Lens Four, Sean Martin, ITSPmagazine Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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