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Kaiser replaces chief of digital records project

An outsider will take over the troubled $4-billion effort from Bruce Turkstra.

February 27, 2007|Daniel Costello, Times Staff Writer

The senior executive overseeing Kaiser Permanente's massive effort to digitize its members' medical records is being replaced, the company said Monday, the latest sign of turmoil for the $4-billion project, one of the nation's largest.

The departure of Bruce Turkstra, interim chief information officer, comes just four months after he was tapped to replace the health maintenance organization's previous CIO, J. Clifford Dodd.


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The announcement is yet another jolt for the nation's largest nonprofit HMO, whose high-profile electronic medical records project has repeatedly been hailed as a possible national model.

With evidence suggesting that digitized record keeping can lower health costs and save lives, President Bush is pushing for every American to have a digital medical record by 2014. About 90% of the healthcare industry still operates with paper records.

But over the last year, Kaiser's new digital system has faced growing problems as it has been expanded into more locations.

Turkstra has directly overseen the creation and rollout of the project, called Health Connect, since its inception in 2003. Kaiser's website Monday referred to him as the program's information technology architect.

Troubles with the effort, which may be endangering patient safety, were detailed by the Los Angeles Times two weeks ago. Oakland-based Kaiser says no patients have been harmed and the technical problems have been solved.

Kaiser said its new technology chief would be Philip Fasano, who oversaw technology departments at Deutsche Bank Group and JPMorgan Chase & Co.

In a statement, Kaiser Chief Executive George Halvorson said he valued Turkstra's "contributions throughout the KP Health Connect project."

A Kaiser spokeswoman said Halvorson decided to hire an outside candidate rather than make Turkstra a permanent chief information officer, a move that was widely expected when he was given the interim job in November.

Turkstra, who wasn't available for comment, is staying on at least through Fasano's transition, Kaiser said. Company executives said the change was not related to recent problems with Health Connect.

In The Times' report, documents and interviews with current and former Kaiser employees showed the effort had encountered repeated technical problems, leading to potentially dangerous incidents such as patients listed in the wrong beds.

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