Under a program focused on expanding apprenticeships, the AHIMA Foundation will receive a $4.9 million grant to fund the Managing the Talent Pipeline in Health Information apprenticeship program. This program will target 1,200 recent college graduates and working learners, providing on-ramps to healthcare data management careers. The AHIMA Foundation is the philanthropic arm of the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA).
The grant awarded to the AHIMA Foundation by the U.S. Department of Labor and announced by President Obama on Sept. 9 in Warren, Mich., will work with employers ranging from Kaiser to the Seattle Children’s Hospital using a competency based, on-the-job apprenticeship training program in healthcare informatics.
A unique aspect of the program is to develop a track to help individuals with high-functioning autism spectrum disorders apprentice in medical coding.
“We’re honored to have the opportunity to help so many qualified people find a role in health information management,” says William Rudman PhD, RHIA, Executive Director, AHIMA Foundation and AHIMA, Vice President, Education Visioning. “This program benefits not only our participants, but also the healthcare industry across the country that will have well-qualified employees to meet the increasing needs for health information.”
The Managing the Talent Pipeline program is accepting applications for both employer sponsors and potential apprentices at ahimafoundation.org.
“Health information management is a growing field with good-paying jobs,” says AHIMA CEO, Lynne Thomas Gordon, MBA, RHIA, CAE, FACHE, FAHIMA. “The Managing the Talent Pipeline program is a critical initiative in helping meet the demand for health information where and when it’s needed so patients and healthcare providers are empowered to make enlightened decisions.”
The Foundation’s grant is part of the $175 million being given through the American Apprenticeship Grants program to 46 public-private partnerships of employers, organized labor, nonprofits, local governments, and educational institutions to expand apprenticeships. The grantees have pledged to train and hire more than 34,000 new apprentices in high-growth and high-tech industries including healthcare, IT, and advanced manufacturing over the next five years.