Our latest monthly Intelligence Report, which draws on the 6,000-plus  healthcare executives who are members of the HealthLeaders Media Council, is titled "Healthcare IT: Tackling Regulatory, Clinical, and Business Needs."  Why, then, is it mentioned in our weekly  finance column? 
Because healthcare IT is expensive. And the report reveals that it's becoming  an ever bigger drain on hospital and health system bottom lines. And that an  ROI from healthcare IT will be hard to find, despite the fervent hopes of  healthcare executives. 
Today, 40% of the 250 respondents say the operating IT budget takes up 2-3% of  their organizations' overall operating revenue. But the respondents—who  represent a range of C-suite leaders and VPs, including CEOs, CFOs, COOs, and  CIOs—expect an upward shift in the near future. More than half (56%) say the  operating IT budget will account for 4% or more of overall operating revenue,  and a fifth expect IT spending to take 6% or more.
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Those percentages are historically high for healthcare, but not necessarily for other industries. You could argue that healthcare is simply catching up.
But what is that extra spending going toward? The top driver, ticked off by 52%  of respondents, was regulatory reporting requirements, most notably ICD-10. The  American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) has long  argued that ICD-10 codes will lead to better patient care, and it's certainly  true that better coding can lead improve reimbursements, but in the end that's  a lot of money to pay for more coders. 
Still, a majority of survey respondents (58%) say their organizations invest in  IT, meaning they expect a financial return, rather than simply spend on IT  (indicated by 42%).
But while the survey indicates overall trends and expectations, the comments by  individual executives reveal how they view healthcare IT. "IT will always disappoint if you expect a return," says the president of a large physician  organization. "Most  CFOs will say they haven't seen a ROI on the investments made in IT as an  industry compared to industries like banking," says Donna Abney, executive vice  president of Methodist Le Bonheur Healthcare, whose organization helped shaped  the Intelligence Report.
Some executives blame  the government; the CEO of a medium-sized hospital says, "The required expenditure on IT to meet government mandates far  exceeds any financial benefit it will produce for the hospital. The Meaningful Use  standards are there to serve the government/payers' purposes." Others blame  technology vendors; the CMO of a medium-sized health system says, "IT is not  yet flexible enough or open enough to show a true ROI. The proprietary nature  of most vendors has a very negative effect on building and creating a truly  patient-focused record and a healthcare IT system that gets us out of the 1970s  in terms of technology."
Despite the varied takes on IT ROI, the survey respondents seem united about  one thing: IT holds great promise for improving the mission and function of  healthcare. "Technology helps improve patient care, ensure compliance, and  facilitates analysis for continued improvement to patient care, which in turn  helps in cost reductions and better bottom line," says the president of a medium-sized  hospital.
That's why healthcare organizations  spend on IT. But how they get from  the present to this happy future state will vary; some executives will enjoy a  strongly positive ROI on their IT investment, while others will spend, spend,  and spend.
(Editor's note: Many of the figures cited here draw from the paid  Premium version of our February Intelligence Report. A free version, containing  HealthLeaders analysis but less data, is also  available for download.)
Edward Prewitt is the Editorial Director of HealthLeaders Media. 
	
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