How can technology transform nursing without losing the human touch that defines patient care?
In this episode of the Smart Care Team Spotlight, Dr. Nancy Beale, Vice President of Clinical Informatics and Chief Nursing Informatics Officer at Catholic Health Services, stresses the importance of involving clinicians in technology design, bridging technical capabilities with clinical needs, and fostering critical thinking skills, especially as AI and digital tools reshape nursing. At Catholic Health, her priorities include reducing administrative burdens, standardizing practices across facilities, and ensuring AI is built on accurate, consistent data. She highlights the role of change management, collaboration with nursing leaders, and addressing workflow inefficiencies, sharing examples of virtual care tools that saved nurses significant time while teaching valuable lessons in implementation. Her advice to nurses is to remain lifelong learners, stay rooted in patient advocacy, and see technology as a tool to enhance the human elements of care.
Join us as Dr. Nancy Beale shares her years of insight on bridging clinical expertise and cutting-edge innovation, revealing how nurses can thrive in AI.
About Dr. Nancy Beale:
A healthcare professional for more than 39 years, Dr. Beale’s experience spans clinical care, operations, vendor, consulting, and IT operations. Nancy was recognized as the 2019 HIMSS-ANI Nursing Informatics Leader of the Year. In 2024, Nancy joined Catholic Health Services in Long Island, New York, as the vice president of clinical informatics and chief nursing informatics officer. Before joining Catholic Health Services, Nancy served as CNIO and President of Telemetrix and Affiliates. Additional past executive experience includes leading clinical systems and integration for an extensive academic health system, achieving HIMSS-6, HIMSS-7, HIMSS-Davies Award, and several innovation partnerships. Her work has included the development of an offshore collaboration and leadership for the clinical systems implementation of a digital hospital in Manhattan. Nancy holds a Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, focused on clinical technology adoption with a minor in human factors and design thinking. She received her master’s degree in nursing from Loyola University of Chicago with an emphasis in Health Systems and Healthcare Informatics, and she is also board-certified in nursing informatics.
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"Did anyone ever ask a nurse what might work? What, or what were they thinking? Or how am I supposed to take care of a patient and use this technology? So I always had an interest in making the technology better"