Fact Sheet: Federal Support Needed to Expand and Modernize Health Care Digital and Data Infrastructure

The COVID-19 emergency highlights the importance of a strong digital health and data infrastructure. Foundational to this infrastructure is adequate, affordable broadband connectivity, which is essential to enabling telehealth and ensuring patients can take full advantage of the modern technology that supports 21st century care delivery. Yet, capacity to deliver telehealth and other virtual services, particularly vital to promoting access to care in underserved communities, requires far more than broadband connectivity. Hospitals and health systems incur significant, sustained costs to support telehealth infrastructure and facilitate virtual care, including secure platforms, licenses, IT support, scheduling, patient education and clinician training. These costs can be a barrier for many hospitals, particularly in light of the significant financial losses due to the pandemic.

As we expand health care’s digital footprint, we also must prioritize strong cyber defenses to protect the privacy and safety of patients and their health information. Hospitals and health systems cannot achieve this alone. Increased federal support and coordination is needed to assist health care organizations as they continue to experience relentless attacks from cyber adversaries.

Additionally, while great advances have been made to modernize health care delivery through digital technologies, the key data systems used by hospitals and government agencies to track health care quality, safety and public health are often antiquated and inefficient. The historic underinvestment in health data infrastructure must be addressed in order to ensure our nation is prepared to respond to the next emergency and improve the health of patients and communities.

AHA Take

The AHA urges Congress and the Biden Administration to prioritize investment in broadband, telehealth and cybersecurity to ensure all patients have secure, sustained, equitable access to care using digital and information technologies. Hospitals, health systems and government agencies also require modernized data systems to better identify and respond to issues that affect health equity, racial and ethnic disparities, the quality of health care delivery, and public health responses.

Why?