Future Skills in Healthcare IT: What Directors Should Be Planning For in 2026

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Healthcare IT leaders are facing a rapidly shifting landscape; one shaped by new interoperability mandates, accelerated AI adoption, and a growing demand for digital-first patient experiences. By 2026, the most successful health systems, especially community and regional hospitals will be those that proactively build teams with the right blend of technical and operational skills.

As a partner to hospitals nationwide, Morgan Hunter Healthcare sees these trends emerging across major EHR platforms (Oracle Cerner, Epic, MEDITECH), revenue cycle systems, interoperability tools, and health analytics environments. Below are the critical skills your IT department should be preparing for now.

  1. AI-Enhanced EHR Workflows and Clinical Decision Support

AI is rapidly moving from pilot projects to core infrastructure. Hospitals are beginning to rely on machine learning tools to support documentation integrity, diagnostic workflows, patient engagement, and staffing optimization.

Skills IT directors should prioritize:

  • Workflow analysts with experience integrating AI add-ons into Epic, Cerner, or MEDITECH
  • Specialists in model governance, validation, and bias mitigation
  • Consultants who understand both clinical workflows and emerging AI APIs
  • Experts in evaluating AI vendors and managing safe implementation at scale

Morgan Hunter Healthcare has seen rising demand for EHR analysts who can configure and monitor AI-enabled modules, particularly in documentation, imaging, and predictive analytics.

  1. Cybersecurity & Zero-Trust Architecture

Cyberattacks on healthcare systems continue to rise, and talent shortages persist. By 2026, hospitals will need more specialized skillsets including expertise in securing cloud-based EHR environments.

Key skills to plan for:

  • Zero-trust deployment expertise
  • Identity & access management (IAM) analysts
  • EHR security configuration specialists
  • Incident response and forensic analysis consultants
  • Cloud security (Azure, AWS, Google Cloud) certification holders

Staffing flexibility is essential here, especially for organizations without a deep security bench.

  1. Data Engineering & Predictive Analytics

Healthcare is shifting to data-driven operations: from bed management to financial forecasting. Directors should expect analytics and data engineering roles to expand significantly.

Critical 2026 skills:

  • Data engineers skilled in ETL pipelines, data lakes, and cloud analytics platforms
  • Analysts fluent in EHR database structures (Chronicles, Cerner Millennium, MEDITECH SQL)
  • BI developers specializing in Power BI, Tableau, Qlik, and embedded analytics tools
  • Experts in revenue cycle analytics and operational dashboards

Hospitals increasingly rely on contract-based analytics talent to deliver insights without adding permanent headcount.

  1. Vendor-Agnostic EHR & Revenue Cycle Specialists

Even as systems standardize, hospitals still need experts who understand multiple platforms or specialize deeply in one.

Growing areas of demand include:

  • Epic Resolute HB/PB, Cadence, and Prelude experts
  • Cerner PowerChart, SurgiNet, RCM, and interface engineers
  • Soarian Financials and legacy conversion specialists
  • MEDITECH Expanse analysts
  • Infor Lawson, Kronos/UKG, and payroll/timekeeping experts

Morgan Hunter Healthcare continues to see high demand for contract and direct-hire analysts who can support optimizations, upgrades, stabilization work, and ongoing maintenance.

  1. Project Managers with Hybrid Technical-Operational Backgrounds

The complexity of healthcare IT projects requires PMs who can translate between operations and IT, especially during EHR upgrades, cloud migrations, or interoperability rollouts.

Skills IT directors should prioritize:

  • PMP-certified leadership with clinical or revenue cycle experience
  • PMs with EHR module experience and strong cross-functional communication
  • Change management expertise, particularly for rural and community hospitals

How IT Directors Can Prepare Now

To be ready for 2026, health systems should:

  • Assess current talent gaps related to the above skillsets
  • Consider a blended staffing model (direct hire + contract consultants)
  • Prioritize roles that support modernization initiatives: interoperability, analytics, cybersecurity, and AI
  • Work with a partner that provides vendor-neutral expertise

Morgan Hunter Healthcare offers both direct-hire and contract staffing solutions, enabling leaders to scale their teams strategically and confidently without committing to unnecessary long-term headcount.

If you need specialized Healthcare IT consultants, from EHR analysts to interoperability engineers to cybersecurity experts, Morgan Hunter Healthcare can help you build the exact team your 2026 strategy requires.
👉 https://mhhealthcare.com/contact/

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