On a summer weekend at Boston College, a group of 24 graduate students enrolled in the program were asked to apply their expertise while using their imaginations.

Shedding their current occupations for imaginary roles (patient, payer, employer, primary-care provider, or specialty provider) the MHA students were charged with envisioning a future in which high-quality, affordable healthcare is delivered effectively and equally to all patients.

What would that look like? And perhaps more importantly, how do we get there?

ā€˜An amazing experienceā€™

The assignment was the culmination of a three-week hybrid course taught by, federal chief medical interoperability officer at Deloitte Consulting LLP and a prominent leader in health information technology. It was also the theme of Innovation Immersion Weekend, the on-site portion of the course that brought students together with top healthcare professionals for several days of learning, problem-solving, and networking on the Ļć½¶Šć campus.

Six panelists seated on stage

Dr. Douglas Rosendale moderated a panel discussion to kick off Innovation Immersion Weekend. Photo: Justin Knight

At an opening reception Friday evening, students heard from keynote speaker, currently a research scientist at the Regenstrief Institute, and a former information officer for Indian Health Service and chief medical information officer for the Veterans Health Administration. Following the keynote lecture, Dr. Rosendale moderated a discussion with panelists Micky Tripathi, president and CEO of Massachusetts eHealth Collaborative, Ray Campbell, executive director of the Massachusetts Center for Health Information and Analysis, Timothy Driscoll, senior director of technology strategies at Boston Childrenā€™s Hospital, and Sharon Vitti, senior vice president and executive director of CVS MinuteClinic.

Then, work for the students began. In between lectures, they worked in groups to tackle the assignment, grappling with current issues like rising costs and considering the role of big data and artificial intelligence in future healthcare settings. By Sunday morning, they were prepared to defend their solutions in front of a panel of expert judges.

ā€œIt was an amazing experience,ā€ said MHA student Fernanda Campbell, Ph.D., who currently serves as a Fellow in Boston Mayor Marty Walshā€™s office (Walsh is a 2009 graduate of Ļć½¶Šćā€™s Woods College of Advancing Studies, which administers the MHA).

The project was ā€œchallenging, but especially motivating after the intensive readings and discussions we had,ā€ Campbell said. ā€œI am convinced after this course that true healthcare reform must be innovative, disruptive, and [empower] patients to become better consumers of health.ā€

Creating Transformative Leaders

Since its launch two years ago at Ļć½¶Šćā€™sĀ Woods College, the MHA program has intensified its focus on empowering future healthcare leaders to become change agents in their field. Students are encouraged to take risks, think creatively, and challenge industry norms.

ā€œOur goal is not to train leaders to maintain the status quo,ā€ explained Emily Raviola, MPH, the MHAā€™s interim program director. ā€œWe want to train our students to be savvy thinkers who understand the existing context and the levers that can be used to drive change. We want to create transformative leaders.ā€

Three students talking in a classroom

Many MHA students hail from one of 17 Boston-area healthcare institutions that have partnered with the Ļć½¶Šć program. Photo: Justin Knight

Increasingly, the program has drawn participants from local healthcare powerhouses such as Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts, Cambridge Health Alliance, and Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital. Nineteen students currently hail from Massachusetts General Hospital, one of 17 healthcare institutions to formally partner with the MHA program.

Participants, all of whom have a minimum of two years professional experience, represent a diverse cross-section of the healthcare field. Thanks to synchronous classes, they interact regularly with one another, forming valuable professional connections.

ā€œAdministrators and clinicians donā€™t often get to really dig into the issues together, but they do in our classrooms,ā€ said Raviola. ā€œWe have nurses, physicians, administrators, people from hospital settings, pharma, insurance providers, startups ā€“ in other words, the full gamut. Peer dialogue greatly enhances student learning.ā€

Career Driven

With the healthcare industry to account for four million jobs by 2026, many students enter the MHA program hoping to advance their careers or identify positions that more closely align with their values. The program employs a full-time, professionally trained executive coach with a background in healthcare to support them on their journey.

ā€œOur coach really helps our students with personal formation,ā€ said Raviola. ā€œShe helps them connect with what theyā€™re passionate about, what theyā€™re good at, and how they aspire to use their gifts in the world.ā€

Raviola has watched this process of self-actualization play out among the programā€™s first graduates, who took part in Commencement exercises in May. In particular, one graduateā€™s story stood out in Raviolaā€™s mind as an example of the programā€™s transformative impact.

ā€œSheā€™s a surgical nurse, and she said being in this program gave her the language to communicate across her organization with leaders who before she hadnā€™t been able to interface with,ā€ said Raviola. ā€œIt completely changed her vision of who she was professionally and how far she could go.ā€Ā  Ā 

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ā€”Alix Hackett | University Communications