- Training will take place through the “Rensselaer Health INCITE Pipeline”
- Funding supports new entry points into health informatics and experiential learning opportunities
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and the United Health Foundation are expanding access to health informatics educational opportunities and applied health data science research experiences through the Rensselaer Institute for Data Exploration and Application (IDEA).
The Rensselaer-United Health Foundation partnership aims to address the growing need for a larger workforce of health data analysts and technologists. The three-year, $1.1 million grant from the United Health Foundation will help launch the “Rensselaer Health Informatics Challenges in Technology Education (INCITE) Pipeline” to prepare students for careers in health data science through several interrelated initiatives, including:
- enhancing curricula to make health informatics more accessible to students from an array of majors such as biology and mathematics;
- creating a new “synthetic data generator” to expose students to real-world health data challenges and test solutions; and
- promoting experiential learning through online challenges available to students at Rensselaer and around the world.
“Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute is a leader in bringing together the physical, digital and biological worlds to drive research innovations and distinct educational opportunities,” said Rensselaer President Dr. Shirley Ann Jackson. “Our partnership with the United Health Foundation will enable us to expand opportunities for researchers and students to tackle the tough challenges of our health care system through the integration of human intelligence with machine intelligence.”
The grant specifically supports the work of the Rensselaer Institute for Data Exploration and Application (IDEA), which enables data science research and education across the Rensselaer campus. The partnership will yield a larger pipeline of students pursuing data science careers in health care, and novel teaching methods that improve undergraduate health informatics education at Rensselaer and beyond.
“The United Health Foundation is honored to partner with Rensselaer to help create a 21st century health care workforce ready to meet the health needs of the nation and the world,” said Dr. Paul Bleicher, a Rensselaer alumnus and CEO of OptumLabs, a UnitedHealth Group company. “Investing in tomorrow’s health care data scientists is vital to helping solve some of the health system’s toughest challenges and creating the actionable insights we need for better care quality and health outcomes.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.