OSF, Illinois State launch Connected Communities Initiative to expand research, develop solutions

OSF, Illinois State launch Connected Communities Initiative to expand research, develop solutions

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A newly formalised partnership between Illinois State University and OSF HealthCare will foster research and economic development across Illinois. The Connected Communities Initiative (CCI) programme will bring together clinicians, university faculty researchers, and students to focus on changes in clinical and patient education, health care engineering, data science, and cybersecurity.

The programme is a formalisation of the partnership between these two anchor institutions in Bloomington-Normal and the broader OSF HealthCare system. Illinois State and OSF HealthCare are lead hub members of the Illinois Innovation Network (IIN). The collaborative work in the Connected Communities Initiative has the potential to generate intellectual property that the two institutions can share and advance the IIN mission of driving inclusive and integrated research, innovation, and economic development across the state.

The agreement also provides a financial foundation for the work with both organisations providing $500,000 (€461860.00) each, to contribute a total of $1 million (€0.92 million) annually for research and development of strategic solutions to improve health care delivery, and patient and provider experience.

“We believe expanding academic collaborations can help us create innovative solutions and new care models that provide more access, particularly to underserved populations,” says CEO of OSF HealthCare Bob Sehring.

“This partnership with Illinois State University will leverage the strengths of faculty and students and will create a pipeline of talent we hope to recruit and keep, including cybersecurity experts, health and simulation educators, informaticists, data scientists, biomedical engineers, and graduates in the creative arts who can help us with medical visualisation for virtual, augmented and mixed reality. This will also build on our long-standing clinical and educational partnership with Mennonite College of Nursing at Illinois State.” says Bob Sehring

“Working with OSF HealthCare on the CCI Programme reflects Illinois State’s core values of collaboration, learning and scholarship, and civic engagement,” says Illinois State Interim president Aondover Tarhule. “This partnership will provide many opportunities for Illinois State faculty and students to work with our partners at OSF on a wide range of innovative projects that address real-world needs. This is truly an exciting project that will have wide-ranging benefits for all involved.”

The partnership will initially build on Illinois State’s expertise in education, health, cybersecurity, biomedical science, visualisation, and process improvement. There will be opportunities for Illinois State’s academic colleges to collaborate on projects with OSF Healthcare. The broad range of faculty expertise and the engagement from the student body will lead to exciting new solutions to complex problems facing society.

“There is a long tradition of partnership between OSF and Illinois State, perhaps most clearly with students in clinical placements and in clinical situations,” says Craig C. McLauchlan, PhD, Illinois State’s associate vice president for research and graduate studies. “The CCI expands that relationship in the area of research and provides an institutional framework that will allow us to build on already existing collaborations more easily. The partnership will provide students and persons in our community opportunities to contribute to innovation and growth that will benefit many.”

OSF Healthcare and Illinois State University have a tradition of collaboration on research, including a recent project to improve low childhood vaccination rates.

Joint projects can include testing solutions in clinical spaces, such as OSF HealthCare St. Joseph Medical Centre and medical offices. The efforts will take place both virtually and in-person in a variety of settings including ISU labs and computer centres, along with Jump Trading Simulation & Education Centre in Peoria, a world-class building with labs focused on advanced imaging and modeling, blockchain, children’s innovation, genomics and precision medicine, interprofessional education, neuro health, and STEAM.

“For OSF HealthCare, the expanded partnership will support the needs of researchers, medical educators, clinicians and most importantly, patients,” adds John Vozenilek, MD, vice president and chief medical officer, OSF Innovation and digital health. “The brightest minds at Illinois State University can help us develop novel solutions with enhanced security and business processes to improve patient care and health outcomes, along with optimising the use of resources using data.” Vozenilek adds, “That will become increasingly important as care continues to move from hospital settings to home and as we expand access to patients across all of the regions OSF serves.”

The CCI is built upon successful models that OSF Healthcare has developed and maintains with the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, University of Illinois-Chicago, and Bradley University.

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