Health Care Technology Is a Promise Unfinanced
By STEVE LOHR
Published: December 3, 2004
From the president on down, the Bush administration has been a proponent of modernizing the nation's creaky health care system with information technology.
But while the administration's words of support for a high-technology future for health care have been plentiful, the dollars, it seems, are scarce.
The huge federal spending bill recently approved by Congress eliminated a seemingly modest $50 million request for the office of Dr. David J. Brailer, who was appointed the national health information technology coordinator in May....
***
...."Congress, in its infinite wisdom, zeroed-out David Brailer's office," said Newt Gingrich, the Republican former House speaker, who is the founder of the Center for Health Transformation, a health policy group. "They couldn't find $50 million to signal that David Brailer has a real job and what he's doing is important. Frankly, I think it's a disgrace."
The Bush administration, Mr. Gingrich said, bore most of the responsibility. "No one in the White House or in the senior staff of the Department of Health and Human Services fought for this," he said....
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/03/technology/03health.html