Nathan Eddy
Nursing and IT
Too often, message sending processes are disjointed, says one nursing IT leader – calling for a more personalized approach to comms, both "content and channel wise."
And with their growing responsibilities, many are eyeing potential promotions to the CEO suite, a new report shows.
Staffing shortages and policy shifts are causing health system chief information officers to seek outside help as they work to manage technology imperatives, a KLAS report shows.
Further, while clinicians are enthusiastic for AI, adoption continues to lag: Less than half of the respondents to the Presidio survey say their organizations are actively deploying AI tools today, highlighting a significant readiness gap.
More than half of Americans think the U.S. healthcare system is fundamentally broken, a new PwC Health Research Institute survey shows, and are looking to technologies, including AI and wearables, to improve care.
The platform is designed to integrate easily into nurses' day-to-day workflows, and now gives them the ability to pause, edit and validate entries to ensure accuracy and compliance, among other new features.
IT leaders play a critical role in breaking down the silos that hinder payer-provider execution of value-based care by championing robust data integration and interoperability, and leading joint technology and AI strategies, says one CEO expert.
A new report shows trust in AI is climbing: One third of patients say they trust AI-generated search results as much as Google, and nearly one in five report trusting AI even more. By contrast, only 11% express skepticism about AI recommendations.
"Rather than waiting for data integrations or struggling to interpret ad hoc reports, teams know where to focus, how to deploy resources, and what results to expect," its president says.