
How technology is transforming healthcare
The Hindu
The boundaries between clinical care, data science, and tech are fast dissolving, making way for a new blueprint for healthcare education
Healthcare is entering a phase where the boundaries between medicine, technology, and data are rapidly dissolving. Digital health, once confined to electronic medical records and teleconsultations, now underpins diagnostics, drug development, population health management, chronic disease care, and patient engagement. This has not only transformed how care is delivered, but also significantly widened the range of healthcare careers with new roles emerging at the intersection of clinical care, technology, data, and systems design.
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Careers in clinical information systems, health analytics, digital therapeutics, remote patient monitoring, and healthcare AI are becoming central to how modern health systems function. This shift has triggered a rethink of healthcare education: how should students be trained for careers that require clinical understanding and digital fluency?
The traditional healthcare education of clinical knowledge and in-person care delivery is no longer sufficient. Today’s professionals are expected to work with digital platforms, clinical software, AI-enabled tools, and large-scale health data systems. Yet, most UG programmes in Medicine, Nursing, Pharmacy, and Allied Health still offer limited formal exposure to digital health. As a result, graduates often encounter complex digital systems for the first time after entering the workforce, leading to inefficiencies, workflow disruptions, and safety risks. As digital tools are deployed at scale, structured education in digital health is no longer optional.
At the UG level, healthcare degrees must begin integrating foundational digital health education with coursework in information systems, digital care models, and healthcare data literacy. Exposure to hospital information systems, laboratory information systems, clinical decision support systems, and basic health analytics should become as routine as training in diagnostics or therapeutics.
For students from non-clinical backgrounds, specialised UG degrees in clinical informatics, point-of-care diagnostics, healthcare analytics, and digital health management are important entry points. They combine healthcare domain knowledge with training in data systems, software platforms, and healthcare operations. Postgraduate education plays a critical role in preparing the digital health workforce. Dedicated Master’s programmes in digital health, clinical information systems, health data science, healthcare analytics, and health artificial intelligence are increasingly aligned with health system and industry needs and prepare graduates to design digital care pathways, manage remote patient monitoring programmes, validate clinical software, and govern AI-enabled systems used in-patient care.













