Blue Care picks DiData and new CIO

Queensland healthcare organisation Blue Care has signed a five-year managed services deal with Dimension Data and simultaneously announced ex-Queensland health director of e-Health Wendy Balachandran as its new chief information officer.

Wendy%20Balachandran-CIO-BlueCare-110x146.jpg

Wendy Balachandran:
Blue Care's new CIO

(Credit: Blue Care)

The not-for-profit broad-based healthcare provider, which has 9,800 staff and 260 centres, signed a five-year deal with Dimension Data in November, according to Dimension Data.

The contract will see DiData manage Blue Care's datacentre, network, email and end-user computing needs. The value of the deal has not been disclosed.

The deal with DiData was part of a major IT refresh planned for Blue Care, which included a three-year plan to centralise its application environment which was currently "local-based", according to Greg Masters, Blue Care's chief operating officer. Blue Care has said it would now implement its Procura health management system as a common information platform across the enterprise.

The healthcare provider was in September seeking to appoint a new chief information officer to support this overhaul, who would report to Masters. It has since selected ex-Queensland health director of eHealth, Wendy Balachandran.

Although unrelated, Balachandran's departure from Queensland Health came three months after ex-Queensland health chief information officer Paul Summergreene was replaced by Dr Richard Ashby on orders by the recently appointed director general of the agency Michael Reid — the former director of NSW Health.

Advertisement

Talkback 0 comments

Latest Videos

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Suzanne Tindal Love me, tender
    Considering how expensive and drawn-out tender processes can be to solve problems that might be very immediate, it's little wonder that the Victorian Police IT department tried to work the tender exemptions system.
  • Array 2009 funding drought rolls on
    For Australian start-ups looking for venture capital, 2009 was a very bad year. 2010 may be no better.
  • Array Can not-so-smart meters help the NBN?
    It was interesting to witness Conroy's recent enthusiasm to spruik the NBN's role in supporting the Smart Grid, Smart City initiative. What a pity that Conroy hadn't yet seen the damning report from the Victorian auditor-general about that state's smart-meter roll-out.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured