Home Innovation Nebraska HIE Endows Population Health Chair at Creighton

Nebraska HIE Endows Population Health Chair at Creighton

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Nebraska HIE Endows Population Health Chair at Creighton

Highlighting the increasing importance of interoperable data to population health efforts, CyncHealth, the designated health information exchange (HIE) for Nebraska and western Iowa, has endowed a chair for population health at Creighton University in Omaha.

Scott Shipman, M.D., M.P.H., who currently serves as director of clinical innovations for the American Association of Medical Colleges (AAMC) in Washington, D.C., has been named the inaugural holder of the CyncHealth Endowed Chair for Population Health at Creighton effective Sept. 1.

“This position represents a unique partnership between Creighton and CyncHealth,” said Creighton Provost Mardell Wilson, Ed.D., R.D.N., in a statement. “As the new endowed chair, Dr. Shipman will serve on the board of the Nebraska Healthcare Collaborative and have access to CyncHealth’s data utilities to mutually benefit the population health research endeavors across our organizations.”

In his new role, Shipman will collaborate with leaders from Creighton’s health sciences programs in Omaha and Phoenix, CHI Health, and CyncHealth’s Nebraska Healthcare Collaborative in developing a vision for population health research, clinical redesign and service that promotes improved health outcomes with a focus on the communities served by Creighton’s clinical partners.

Shipman, trained as a health services researcher, has led interdisciplinary teams to support evidence-based practice and policy. Through his research, he has provided leadership and advocacy in promoting health policy and clinical models that extend health care workforce capacity and effectiveness. In the last decade, he has led efforts at the AAMC to support clinical transformation and integration, focused in ambulatory care settings at large academic health systems.

CyncHealth connecting more than 5 million lives and 1,135 facilities, including hospitals, specialty hospitals, rural health clinics, specialty clinics, long-term post-acute care facilities and other entities that have valuable data for monitoring the health of populations. The Nebraska Healthcare Collaborative, powered by CyncHealth, is focused on building a health data-competent workforce through academic and community partnerships and data projects.

At Creighton, Shipman will collaborate with the chair of Creighton’s Department of Clinical Research and Public Health and the Center for Interprofessional Practice, Education and Research (CIPER). He will also work with population health leadership at Creighton’s clinical partner, CHI Health, and with the vice president of community and academic programs at the Nebraska Healthcare Collaborative.

After earning his medical degree from the University of Nebraska Medical Center in 1995, Shipman completed his training in pediatrics at Dartmouth. He then completed a fellowship as a Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar at Johns Hopkins, and received a master’s degree in public health from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. He joined the AAMC in 2012 as director of primary care initiatives and workforce analysis and was promoted to his current position in 2017. Previously, he was an assistant professor in the Department of Pediatrics, Community and Family Medicine, and the Dartmouth Institute of Health Policy and Clinical Practice, at Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center and Geisel School of Medicine.

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