Program
The future of user experience strategy and design
In this presentation I'll run through the fundamentals of UX, the process and how we slide it into the Agile Methodology.
Bernard Schokman Managing Principal, BernardSchokman.com and UXTraining.com.au
Since 1989, Bernard has spent more than a decade working with a variety of programming languages; he transitioned from development to automated load, performance and system testing; led development teams and business analyst teams on large transformation projects and project-managed teams across different continents. The transition into UX came while on a three year secondment as a Business Analyst, when asked to support a large BA team with user experience designs for an internal administration CRM and two client facing websites. Over the last six years, business has become of particular interest to Bernard and having a practical passion for UX it was only natural for Bernard’s to blend the flavours of Business and User Experience together. He’s extremely practical, looks at ‘shifting’ business metrics and will often say, “UX is the tool we use to shift a business” because he believes this is the fundamental purpose of User Experience Strategy and Design.
Why should informatics care about UX
A/Prof Chris Bain Founder, healthtech-ux
Chris is an experienced former clinician, and a health IMT practitioner with a unique set of qualifications, and a unique exposure to broad aspects of the healthcare system in Australia. He is a professional member of the ACS (Australia) and the ACM (US). He also has extensive experience in designing, leading and running operational IMT functions in healthcare organisations. His main interests are in the usability of technology in healthcare, data and analytics, software and system evaluation, technology ecosystems, and the governance of IT and data. Chris is currently the Chief Health Information Services Manager at Mercy Public Hospitals Incorporated where he is leading a team of 60 staff through major process and technology transformation.
FHIR: Impact of new interoperability on UX design
Grahame Grieve Principal, Health Intersections
Grahame Grieve is HL7's Product Director for "FHIR" - the leading healthcare data exchange standard of the future. Grahame has a background in laboratory medicine, software vendor development, clinical research, open source development and has also conceived, developed and sold interoperability and clinical document solutions and products in the Australian market and around the world. Grahame has worked to develop standards and solutions with several US vendor consortiums, and the national programs of Canada, England, Singapore, and Australia.
Trends in digital identity for e-health
Michael Dowling Lead, Accenture’s Digital Identity Practice line of Business, Australia and APAC region
Michael leads Accenture’s Digital Identity practice line of business for Australia and APAC region. He has extensive experience in designing and delivering complex digital identity and access management solutions for organisations in the public and private sector, including leading the security design for Singapore’s National Electronic Health Record. He is part of Accenture’s global digital identity leadership team and has played a key role in the development of the company’s thought leadership in identity and access management.