Skip to main content

Population and Public Health

By Jessica Davis | 01:00 pm | January 10, 2017
Liquid biopsies, opioid addiction biosensors and AI top ECRI's annual list of technologies that will transform the healthcare industry in the year ahead.
By Diana Manos | 08:44 am | January 10, 2017
Emerging models, such as value-based care, cannot adequately move forward without factoring in the role social determinants of health play. 
By Bernie Monegain | 02:20 pm | January 06, 2017
The organization said it will implement HealtheIntent across six hospitals. 
By Tom Sullivan | 08:08 am | January 06, 2017
The new iteration will bring integration with Cisco and Avaya, a single app including various communications tools and clinical workflow features. 
By Bernie Monegain | 10:34 am | January 04, 2017
The firm also found that tech illiteracy is the next roadblock to achieving population health success.
By Healthcare IT News | 03:57 pm | January 03, 2017
Session ideas should focus on the cornerstones of population health: data and analytics, care coordination, patient engagement and experience and reimbursement.
By Jessica Davis | 09:21 am | December 29, 2016
The hospital and health information exchange leverage predictive analytics to create personalized care regimens that payoff by reducing readmissions and boosting patient outcomes. 
By Bernie Monegain | 12:14 pm | December 27, 2016
The Indiana Biosciences Research Institute has unveiled a new effort to understand how type 2 diabetes varies from patient to patient. With access to data on more than 800,000 diabetics, researchers see it as a big step toward new treatments and improved diagnostic tools.
By Bernie Monegain | 11:07 am | December 27, 2016
The organizations intend to apply Watson supercomputing capabilities to analyze EHR and claims data alongside social determinants of health to fuel personalized care and population management.
By Chris Nerney | 08:24 am | December 27, 2016
It’s personal for Kathryn Pearson Peyton. But the interoperability upside to storing breast cancer images in the cloud could be a boon to earlier detection and reducing unnecessary imaging.