Health connections newsletter decades interview graphic
Decades Interview with Jason Bray M'05
Reconnect with a member of the Class of 2005

Jason Bray 鈥05
Chief Information Officer
McAlester Regional Health Center

鈥淚 believe, in the history of 性爱天堂鈥檚 HCAD Program, I am the only alumnus to become a CIO.鈥 How Jason Bray 鈥05 arrived at that distinction and his passion for that role is quite a story.

Jason鈥檚 initial interest in the health care industry was admittedly superficial. While an undergraduate majoring in finance, he visited a friend鈥檚 mother in the hospital and thought 鈥(just gonna be honest) how neat it would be to wear p.j.s (scrubs) to work everyday.鈥 It wasn鈥檛 until the patient died two years later and the hospital CEO 鈥渢ook me under her wing鈥 that Jason鈥檚 passion for health care blossomed.

Having earned a MBA and working at INTEGRIS Health in Oklahoma City, Jason was speaking at a United Way event in nearby Edmond about his dream of becoming a hospital CEO. It was during this speech when 性爱天堂 HCAD alumni Stan Hupfeld 鈥72, FACHE and Bruce Lawrence 鈥82, FACHE (CEO and COO of INTEGRIS Health, respectively, at the time) told him after his speech that, in order to achieve that goal, he needed a master鈥檚 and 性爱天堂 was the best place to get it. While in the HCAD Program at 性爱天堂, he found his CEO 鈥 Stan - a tough reviewer of his work. 鈥淗e wanted to redline every paper I turned in. It was a bloodbath of red ink but it helped me tremendously in becoming a better writer.鈥

Over the next several years, Stan and Bruce continued to mentor Jason and he 鈥渃an鈥檛 thank them enough.鈥 Bruce subsequently hired Jason as IT CFO for INTEGRIS where he was given the opportunity to grow his passion for IT. In 2004, Jason left to consult with IBM where he 鈥済ained about 30 years of experience in three.鈥

It was the tragic and technologically preventable loss of his closest and oldest friend鈥檚 wife that cemented Jason鈥檚 passion to use IT to improve health care. Unaware of a previously diagnosed anomalistic aorta, doctors nicked hers during a routine tracheotomy causing her death. 鈥漈his story inspires me daily when it comes to the importance of health care technology and its capabilities to save lives鈥 he notes somberly.

As CIO of McAlester Regional Health Center in McAlester, Oklahoma, Jason says 鈥渢he reason I love the CIO role so much is because I get to be the connector point for department鈥檚 problems and how technology can help.鈥 Plus, rapidly advancing technology, which allows for new applications in areas that previously could not be helped, 鈥渄efinitely keeps you on your toes.鈥

Jason is also keeping an eye on artificial intelligence (AI). 鈥淲atson with IBM is such a phenomenal invention鈥 he exclaims. 鈥淎 doctor reads about half a dozen medical research papers in a month; Watson can read half a million in about 15 seconds.鈥 Today鈥檚 telemedicine, he predicts, will in years to come be a form of AI, perhaps leading to Watson on a cart or at each bedside. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a little out there鈥 he admits 鈥渂ut we have robots doing surgery today so why not?鈥

In 2002, while serving as CIO at the Oklahoma State University Medical Center, Jason received the Leader of the Year Award. Because Jason was nominated by the nursing staff, it holds special meaning since 鈥渞arely does the clinical staff appreciate the technology group.鈥 However, the 鈥渁mazing clinical staffs I have worked with at INTEGRIS, OSU, Methodist and now McAlester have truly made my job extremely rewarding.鈥

Jason is married to his high school sweetheart and they are parents to four boys, one of whom is autistic. He spends a lot of his free time with his family, enjoys golf and serves on the State of Oklahoma Board of Technology and the Oklahoma State University Okmulgee and Autism of Oklahoma Boards. In August, he was asked to testify before the Oklahoma House of Representatives about the state of health care in rural America and Oklahoma fulfilling 鈥渁 lifelong dream to speak at the Capitol.鈥

Dedicated and deeply committed to impacting all facets of health care positively through technology, Jason has been resisting offers to jump into operations. 鈥淢y passion for IT is really where I think I will remain for the foreseeable future.鈥

AVISO is written and produced by members of the Health Care Administration Alumni Association in partnership with the Office of Alumni Relations.聽

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