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  Obama's Health IT Dilemma: The 'Some Dude' Problem
LinuxMedNews Posted by Ignacio Valdes, MD on Saturday January 03, 2009 @ 07:01 PM
from the Linux Medical News dept.
The Obama administration has made a pledge to spend $50 billion dollars on Health IT, yet it is unclear how they will come to grips with proprietary health IT software, a problem I will call the 'Some Dude' phenomenon. In my now lengthening health IT career, I have frequently come across a remarkably destructive and unfortunately abundant person called 'Some Dude'. Some Dude is the proprietary license holder of an entrenched piece of health IT software that needs to be interfaced with other software. Some Dude is entirely and in my experience usually capable of: stonewalling, obstructing, fleecing, lying, tollboothing, and ignoring any effort to interface with their proprietary software. There are few to no penalties or consequences to the proprietary license holders for such destruction. There are many real consequences and penalties for patients and practitioners by such obstruction. Digg this article

How are they able to do this? Because they can. Why are they able to do this? Because they can. Some Dude can utterly destroy any effort at interoperability by doing nothing. Laziness, greed, fear, or stupidity are frequent ulterior motives. They either do not want to do it for any reason whatsoever, see you as a potential customer upon whom they have a self-conferred right to erect a tollbooth, fear competition, or lack the training, education or experience to do what is needed.

Proprietary health IT software gives them that power. This is precisely what standards do not address and precisely what $50 billion will not fix. Sordid scenes of being reduced to begging, cajoling, threatening, offering carrots, etc usually do not work either.

This problem cannot be underestimated. I have personally witnessed Some Dude obstruct and demolish worthy projects for years and I am currently being obstructed for weeks and counting by Some Dude for the simplest of requests. Some Dude appears to be nearly everywhere in Health IT. Some Dude easily destroys nearly every attempt at cooperation or interoperabilty I repeat by doing nothing, ignoring, stupidity, or demanding payment for the simplest of operations.

Some dude often portrays themselves as a self-appointed expert without the training, credentials or experience that the title of 'expert' is usually accompanied by. An analogy is hiring a plumber to install pipes in a house and the plumber retaining all legal rights to any addition, modification, or change to those pipes. Crazy? You bet it is, yet this is precisely the case with proprietary Health IT software and the Some Dude problem.

Free and Open Source health IT Software outlined in a recent AMIA white paper, inherently suffers far less from the Some Dude problem than proprietary software does. How the Obama administration's $50 Billion proposal is going to deal with Some Dude, if they deal with Some Dude at all, will be interesting to watch.



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  • The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them.
    ( Reply )

    Re: Obama's Health IT Dilemma: The 'Some Dude' Problem
    by sam on Monday January 05, 2009 @ 03:00 AM
    Bla your dig link aint working. Personally I hate microsoft, some dude, and mr. moneyman obama. Tax spend tax regulate tax spend. Yea git err dun dude....
    [ Reply to this ]
    Re: Obama's Health IT Dilemma: The 'Some Dude' Problem
    by zman58 on Monday January 05, 2009 @ 05:54 AM
    "Some Dude" is the result of "Some Manager" approving for purchase said restrictive proprietary up-the-creek solution. The suitability of a software solution should be judged on its longer term and sustainable merits. A set of fancy features and marketing speak is not enough. A 90's era software acquisition process is just no longer adequate for today's IT solutions. Competition is required and single-source proprietary vendors should be out of the picture. Open source (free as in libre, GPL, ASL etc.) solutions should be emphasized with paid-for support on a multi-vendor competitive basis.
    [ Reply to this ]
    Re: Obama's Health IT Dilemma: The 'Some Dude' Problem
    by Nadim D on Tuesday January 06, 2009 @ 12:29 PM
    Do you think the unconstructive effects of Some Dude can be tamed down through better customer education, which would allow building stronger RFP's that would explicitly force the vendors out of proprietary schemes and into standardized interfaces? I can understand the vendors don't have any incentive to open up their software proactively, but I think they can definitely be bound to doing it since the technology exists... Look at Canada Infoway for example... All we need is to ask!
    [ Reply to this ]
    Re: Obama's Health IT Dilemma: The 'Some Dude' Problem
    by James Pannozzi on Saturday January 10, 2009 @ 05:13 PM
    You're right on the mark about the "some dude" obstructionist agenda and the desire to reap $$$$ in medical software - typically some dude will be also be aggresvely seeking unlimited h1b visas and will delight in decimating software staff by outsourcing and leaving those who remain to "hold the fort" while they set up cheap Asian labor contracts to reap in the $$$. The fact that Pakistan and India are about to nuke each other to oblivion never enters their dim witted bean counter brains. But you name for this trick, the "some dude" phenomena, is wrong - the correct name is, in my opinion, MICROSOFT EXPLOITATIVE OBSTRUCTIONISM and the "some dude" was, also in my opinion, the granddaddy of all such ploys, BILL GATES, currently world "humaitarian" whose foundation invests in 3d world polluting oil companies but then gives free "vaccines" to the unfortunate inhabitants of such areas. Pssst! Wanna free malaria or polio shot? Right this way dudes, right this way!
    [ Reply to this ]
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