Digital Health
The future of health care is digital
Taught by Harvard Medical School faculty, this Harvard Online course explores the opportunities and difficulties facing widespread adoption of digital technologies in the US health care system and explores innovative frameworks to think strategically about implementing digital transformation in your organization.
3–4 hours per week
3–4 hours per week
What You'll Learn
How has digital transformation influenced the health care industry?
Millions of health-related data points are captured every day, from information collected by our personal devices and doctor's office visits to public health data collection about disease prevalence and treatment outcomes. Digital technologies have transformed how we buy and listen to music and how we plan our travel. Will there be a similar digital disruption in health care?
Throughout this online digital health certificate program, you will become familiar with developments that have led to digital transformation in health care and weigh the pros and cons of digital technology in health care. You will understand the process of product development in digital health innovation by participating in a fictional hackathon, working alongside other learners to determine which digital tools to invest in.
Using a selection of real-world case studies as a starting point, you will evaluate the potential impact of digital tools on patients, physicians, payers, and future health care ecosystems. In doing so, you’ll consider the impact digital tools have on these stakeholders to understand how data tracking and digital health products can improve patient care, enhance communication between doctors and patients, increase employee benefits and happiness, and track health trends and develop solutions.
While this course emphasizes independent learning, it also provides opportunities for peer collaboration through group assignments and online discussions.
The course is part of the Harvard on Digital Learning Path and Health Care Leadership Learning Path will be delivered via HBS Online’s course platform. Learners will be immersed in real-world examples from experts at industry-leading organizations.
By the end of this digital health program you will:
- Understand how digital technologies can address critical pain points in health care
- Learn how to think about applications of collecting and using data to inform health care, and the privacy risks and analytical pitfalls unique to health care data
- Explore the opportunities and difficulties of implementing new technology in health care, such as artificial intelligence, machine learning, apps, and sensors
- Navigate the systemic barriers and often conflicting needs of health care stakeholders in bringing digital health technologies to market
- Become adept at analyzing gaps in health care that can be closed with technology and data
Continuing Medical Education Information
In support of improving patient care, Harvard Medical School is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.
Physicians
The Harvard Medical School designates this enduring online activity for a maximum of 14.25 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s) ™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
Nurse Practitioners and Registered Nurses
For the purpose of recertification, the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners Certification Board and American Nurses Credentialing Center accept AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ issued by organizations accredited by the ACCME (Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education). We would also suggest that learners check with their state licensing board to ensure they accept reciprocity with AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ for re-licensure.
Physician Assistants
The National Commission on Certification of Physician Assistants (NCCPA) states that AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™ are acceptable for continuing medical education requirements for recertification. We would also suggest that learners check with their state licensing board to ensure they accept reciprocity with AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ for re-licensure.
Canadian Accreditation
The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada recognizes conferences and workshops held outside of Canada that are developed by a university, academy, hospital, specialty society or college as accredited group learning activities.
European Accreditation
The American Medical Association (AMA) has an agreement of mutual recognition of continuing medical education (CME) credit with the European Union of Medical Specialties (UEMS). Additional information regarding this agreement may be found here: American Medical Association (AMA) website.
Your Instructor
Stanley Y. Shaw, MD, PhD is the Associate Dean for Executive Education at Harvard Medical School. In this role, he directs Harvard Medical School's programs for companies and individuals in the health care industry that provide insights into leadership behaviors and emerging technologies. These programs educate learners across diverse sectors of health care, such as tech, IT, biopharma, investing, and care delivery organizations. A practicing cardiologist, Dr. Shaw’s research studies how digital tools, bioinformatics, the gut microbiome, and patient-reported data can be leveraged to better assess health and disease.
Job Outlook
6X More Jobs
Since January 2020, there has been a significant increase in jobs in the health care industry listing “Digital Transformation” as a required skill.
Join the Top 6% of the Job Market
There are more than 29,000 job postings looking for talent with skills including “Digital Transformation” and “Technology Entrepreneurship”, among others, while only 6% of job seekers list these skills.
Data: Source: Lightcast™
Available Discounts and Benefits for Groups and Individuals
Experience Harvard Online by utilizing our wide variety of discount programs for individuals and groups.
Past Participant Discounts
Learners who have enrolled in at least one qualifying Harvard Online program hosted on the HBS Online platform are eligible to receive a 30% discount on this course, regardless of completion or certificate status in the first purchased program. Past Participant Discounts are automatically applied to the Program Fee upon time of payment. Learn more here.
Learners who have earned a verified certificate for a HarvardX course hosted on the edX platform are eligible to receive a 30% discount on this course using a discount code. Discounts are not available after you've submitted payment, so if you think you are eligible for a discount on a registration, please check your email for a code or contact us.
Nonprofit, Government, Military, and Education Discounts
For this course we offer a 30% discount for learners who work in the nonprofit, government, military, or education fields.
Eligibility is determined by a prospective learner’s email address, ending in .org, .gov, .mil, or .edu. Interested learners can apply below for the discount and, if eligible, will receive a promo code to enter when completing payment information to enroll in a Harvard Online program. Click here to apply for these discounts.
Gather your team to experience Digital Health and other Harvard Online courses to enjoy the benefits of learning together:
- Single invoicing for groups of 10 or more
- Tiered discounts and pricing available with up to 50% off
- Growth reports on your team's progress
- Flexible course and partnership plans
Who Will Benefit
Real World Case Studies
Affiliations are listed for identification purposes only.
Katherine Chou
Hear from the Director of Research & Innovations at Google on using health and AI data for social good.
Marcus Osborne
Learn from the Senior Vice President of Walmart Health on using digital technologies to make health care more affordable and accessible.
Sean Duffy
Hear from the CEO of Omada Health on designing user-friendly digital tools for optimizing patient success.
Syllabus and Upcoming Calendars
Digital technologies hold great potential for enhancing health care, in terms of empowering patients, improving access and equity, and delivering better health outcomes. Yet health care’s digital transformation lags behind that of other industries. This course, Digital Health, aims to help learners unlock digital transformation in health care and improve the industry by providing a framework to enable learners to think strategically about digital health solutions, develop and deploy them in health care’s unique culture and ecosystem, and navigate the sometimes competing needs of health care’s multiple stakeholders.
Learning requirements: There are no prerequisites required to take this course. To earn a Certificate of Completion from Harvard Online, participants must thoughtfully complete modules 1 through 4.
- Study patient-facing solutions in the Omada Health case.
- Identify barriers to care in simulated clinical interaction, and opportunities for digital solutions to mitigate these.
- Take a patient-centric view of unmet medical needs, key metrics, and outcomes for a digital solution.
- Navigate the potential of digital solutions to improve access but also create new barriers to care.
- Study enterprise AI solutions through Google Health.
- Explore the competing needs of stakeholders for an enterprise digital solution.
- Consider physician needs and apprehensions about digital solutions.
- Evaluate the robustness and potential weaknesses of an AI development pipeline.
- Proactively anticipate how bias can arise in development and deployment of AI algorithms.
- Evaluate how well competing fictional start-ups address the themes of this module.
- Study the Evidation Health case to understand how to solve needs for patients and drug discovery.
- Compare the strengths and weaknesses of different digital business models.
- Differentiate the capabilities of different digital care management platforms.
- Consider the regulatory implications of different kinds of digital health solutions.
- Reflect on obstacles to successful pilots with care delivery organizations.
- Evaluate how well competing fictional start-ups address the themes of this module.
- Study the Walmart Health case to understand digital solutions in the future of health care.
- Compare health care to other sectors of the economy that are more digitally mature, as a view into the future.
- Understand the usefulness but also limitations of the “patients as consumers” analogy.
- Anticipate changes to the patient experience, culture of health care, and other stakeholder perspectives in a digitally-enabled future of health care.
- Describe the challenges of data coordination and interoperability.
- Evaluate the equity impact of a digital tool.
- Decide which fictional start-up you choose to back based on your.