Healthcare is undergoing a profound shift, with technology playing an increasingly central role in improving patient outcomes, clinician efficiency, and organizational sustainability. Few leaders have been as deeply immersed in this transformation as Inderpal Kohli, a veteran healthcare executive technology leader with over two decades of experience across institutions such as Columbia University Medical Center, Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS), and Englewood Health.
In a recent episode of The Big Unlock podcast, Inderpal shared his journey, lessons learned, and his perspectives on the future of healthcare digital transformation. His experiences shed light on how health systems can approach innovation thoughtfully, balance risks with rewards, and deliver tangible results for both patients and clinicians.
Like many technologists who entered healthcare by chance, Inderpal’s career began in software development for the banking and financial industry. A project assignment at Columbia University Medical Center introduced him to biomedical informatics and clinical research systems—a turning point that solidified his decision to stay in healthcare.
At Columbia, he witnessed firsthand how research innovations could translate from “bench to bedside.” That early experience taught him the importance of building digital solutions that directly impact patient care. His subsequent roles at HSS and Englewood Health gave him opportunities to work on digital transformation initiatives at scale—from EHR implementation and clinical system integration to enterprise-wide modernization in cybersecurity, networking, and data centers.
This journey highlights a central theme in healthcare IT leadership: success comes not just from technical expertise, but from understanding the continuum of patient care and clinician needs.
One of the projects Inderpal is most proud of is the digital pathology transformation at HSS. While radiology has long been digitized, pathology remained tied to glass slides and microscopes. Recognizing the inefficiencies of this approach, he championed a program to digitize pathology workflows, working with Epic, PACS vendors, and scanner providers.
The timing coincided with the COVID-19 pandemic, which accelerated adoption. Within a year, 70% of pathology cases were being diagnosed digitally—a remarkable achievement for a specialty deeply rooted in traditional methods.
The benefits went beyond efficiency. Digital pathology allowed pathologists, surgeons, radiologists, and infectious disease specialists to correlate images seamlessly, improving collaboration and patient care. It also opened the door to AI-powered tools for cell counting, pattern recognition, and diagnostic quality improvement.
As Inderpal noted, digital pathology was “a first in the country” at that time and set the stage for broader adoption of AI in diagnostics.
At Englewood Health, Inderpal spearheaded a three-pronged digital physician strategy:
These initiatives reinforced a powerful lesson: when thoughtfully integrated with core systems like Epic, digital engagement strategies not only enhance convenience but also deliver measurable improvements in population health.
A recurring theme in Inderpal’s work is reducing the burden on clinicians. At Englewood, he introduced ambient documentation technology to relieve physicians of the after-hours “pajama time” spent completing charts.
The impact was significant:
In addition, AI-driven tools are now assisting with MyChart message responses, chart summarization, and prior authorization workflows. By embedding these technologies within the EHR, organizations can scale efficiencies while maintaining clinician trust.
Despite the successes, Inderpal is candid about the challenges. He categorizes them into technology, process, and resource barriers:
These insights emphasize that digital transformation is as much about mindset change as it is about technology adoption.
Looking ahead, Inderpal sees AI and agent-based automation as central to the next phase of transformation. While today’s deployments focus on low-risk, non-clinical areas such as scheduling and payments, he predicts rapid expansion into clinical workflows.
Inderpal captures the spirit of this transformation with a memorable quote:
“AI won’t replace clinicians, but clinicians who use AI will outperform those who don’t.”
The message is clear: healthcare’s future will be shaped not just by tools, but by how leaders and clinicians reimagine workflows, patient interactions, and care delivery through these tools.
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