Mr. DiLuzio has over 35 years of experience in senior management roles across a broad range of healthcare settings. Throughout his career, he has proven the ability to develop and execute strategy in support of organizational vision, foster team work between physicians and management, and develop innovative new programs. He has demonstrated exceptional skills in strategic planning, operational management, leadership/manager development, team building, and relationship management.
Mr. DiLuzio’s key areas of expertise include:
• Strategy development and execution
• Operational efficiency improvement
• Leadership/management development
• Physician-management relations
• Hospital service line development
Mr. DiLuzio began his career with Hamot Health Systems in Erie, Pennsylvania. While at Hamot, he conceptualized and developed one of the nation’s first Cardiopulmonary Centers (1972), an early prototype for healthcare service lines that was eventually taken corporate-wide. In 1994, he was recruited by Gundersen Lutheran Health System in Wisconsin, an integrated regional health system serving three states in the Upper Midwest with 450 physicians and 6,000 employees. There, he served in numerous leadership roles including:
• Administrative director, Gundersen Lutheran Heart Institute
• Acting administrative director Gundersen Lutheran Cancer Center (concurrently with the Heart Institute)
• Director, Corporate Research Planning and Development
He is active in several educational institutions:
• Assistant professor, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse
• Adjunct Faculty Advance Program, Viterbo University, La Crosse, Wisconsin.
• Member, Curriculum and Guidelines Committee, Medical College of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia
Mr. DiLuzio has an associate degree in Management from Gannon University, Erie, Pennsylvania; a bachelor’s of science in Management degree and a master’s in Business Administration from the City University of Bellvue, Washington. Presently, Mr. DiLuzio is a doctoral candidate in Leadership and Organizational Development at Saint Mary’s University in Winona, Minnesota.