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The role of the Chief Medical Officer has changed significantly over the past decade. What was once primarily a clinical oversight function has evolved into a broad executive mandate that spans strategy, technology, workforce management, and organizational performance. The Healthcare CMO Summit 2026, taking place September 17-18 at Encore Boston Harbor in Boston, Massachusetts, is built around the issues that are defining this evolution and the leaders who are navigating it in real time.
The State of the Industry
American health systems are operating under sustained pressure. According to the Association of American Medical Colleges, the United States could face a physician shortage of up to 86,000 by 2036, compounding existing challenges around clinician burnout and staff retention. At the same time, health system consolidation continues at pace, with the American Hospital Association reporting that the majority of U.S. hospitals now operate as part of larger systems, creating new demands on clinical integration and standardization.
Artificial intelligence is increasingly moving from experimentation into clinical deployment. A 2024 survey by the American Medical Association found that more than half of physicians now work in settings where AI tools are in active use, yet governance frameworks and regulatory clarity continue to lag behind adoption rates. For CMOs, managing this gap between capability and oversight is one of the defining challenges of the current period.
The Healthcare CMO Summit 2026 addresses these realities through a focused agenda built around six core themes:
AI in Healthcare: From Hype to Clinical Implementation
This theme examines how CMOs are moving AI from pilot programs to safe, scalable clinical use. Discussions focus on governance structures, regulatory compliance, and ensuring that AI tools deliver measurable patient benefit rather than operational complexity.
The Clinical Workforce Crisis: Burnout, Retention and New Care Models
With physician and nursing shortages rising and burnout rates remaining persistently high, health systems are being forced to redesign their workforce models. This theme explores practical strategies for strengthening clinician engagement, improving retention, and building care delivery structures that are sustainable over the long term.
Health System Consolidation: Aligning Clinical Strategy Across Expanding Networks
As hospitals continue to merge into larger systems, CMOs face the challenge of integrating physician networks, standardizing clinical protocols, and maintaining quality across increasingly complex organizations. This theme addresses the leadership and operational frameworks required to manage clinical strategy at scale.
Hybrid Care and Hospital-at-Home: Expanding the Hospital Beyond Its Walls
Virtual care, remote monitoring, and hospital-at-home programs are reshaping where and how acute care is delivered. This theme examines how CMOs are leading the transition to hybrid care models while maintaining clinical standards and patient safety outside traditional hospital settings.
Operational Transformation: Improving Capacity, Throughput and Efficiency
CMOs are playing an increasingly central role in efforts to optimize patient flow, reduce delays, and deliver high-quality care with constrained resources. This theme focuses on the operational levers available to clinical leaders and the strategies that are producing measurable results in complex health system environments.
The Modern CMO: From Clinical Leader to System Architect
The Chief Medical Officer role is evolving from clinical oversight to enterprise leadership. This theme examines what it means to lead across strategy, innovation, and system-wide performance, and what skills and organizational structures are required to do so effectively.
A Setting Built for Substantive Exchange
What distinguishes the Healthcare CMO Summit from broader industry conferences is its invitation-only format and its emphasis on peer-to-peer dialogue. Attendees are active contributors to a program shaped by their own professional priorities and organizational experiences. This structure enables a level of specificity and candor that is rarely possible in larger, open-access formats.
The Summit also connects CMOs directly with healthcare technology and services companies whose offerings are pre-aligned with their stated priorities, reducing the time and friction typically associated with vendor evaluation and creating more productive conversations on both sides.
RSVP to request more details or contact:
Christophoros Ioannou at christophorosi@marcusevanscy.com
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