More Short Takes at #HIMSS18 – Harlow On Healthcare
New Harlow on Healthcare Episode NOW on Demand with host David Harlow. From HIMSS18, he spoke with Win Whitcomb, Michael Nissenbaum, Eric Sullivan, and Simon Beulah.
Read MoreNew Harlow on Healthcare Episode NOW on Demand with host David Harlow. From HIMSS18, he spoke with Win Whitcomb, Michael Nissenbaum, Eric Sullivan, and Simon Beulah.
Read MoreNew CTO Talk episode NOW on demand with host Matt Ferrari. Community Care of North Carolina System & VirtualHealth discuss how CCNC is advancing care coordination through forward thinking partnerships in a case management model for it’s 1.7 million medicaid members.
New Harlow on Healthcare Episode NOW on Demand with host David Harlow. He spoke with Mitchell Goldburgh from NTT Data Services at HIMSS18 about NTT’s imaging-focused and other tools focused on improving population health.
New CTO Talk Episode NOW on Demand with host Matt Ferrari. Collaboration in the cloud for improved, individualized cancer care with guests Raj Harapanahalli, Head of the Software Center of Excellence, and Vikram Mohan, Sr. Director of Product Management from Roche Diagnostics.
By Donald Voltz, MD – But Are They Already Here? In his HIMSS keynote address, Alphabet’s former executive chairman and now current technical advisor Eric Schmidt warned attendees that the “future of healthcare lies in the need for killer apps.”
Your personal health information is moving and being viewed to improve the quality of your healthcare and lower the costs. The job will not be complete until all health records are digital and interoperable. Here’s what’s happening to make that reality.
For this week’s Friday Five we have chosen to focus on interviews from HIMSS18 with five different CEOs discussing what’s happening in analytics, blockchain, interoperability,…
Both consumers and physicians are eager for increased digital engagement, according to a new nationwide poll released by Ernst & Young LLP at HIMSS18.
Keeping up with technologies changing how healthcare is delivered. Can a continuously growing chain of blocks using cryptography have applications in healthcare?