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Artificial Intelligence

By Charlie Farah | 01:00 am | January 24, 2019
The industry must first get ready for the AI era by building up skills in reading, working with, analysing and arguing with data – also known as data literacy.
By Bill Siwicki | 03:10 pm | January 23, 2019
The health IT vendor sees creative and cross-sector use of emerging technology among the big trends on the front burner at HIMSS19.
By Staff Writer | 01:00 am | January 23, 2019
In an effort to deliver on safety for patients through the establishment of protocols around AI, the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Radiologists (RANZCR) has created a working group that determines how the technology fits into the world of radiology and healthcare.
By Bill Siwicki | 04:44 pm | January 22, 2019
These are two trends the electronic health record giant will be discussing with attendees at HIMSS19 in Orlando.
By Bill Siwicki | 02:16 pm | January 21, 2019
The specialty pavilion is the destination for leading-edge exhibition, education and networking on the show floor.
By Bill Siwicki | 11:03 am | January 21, 2019
"Voice user interfaces are an essential step to humanizing the EHR," says Vanderbilt University Medical Center’s Dr. Yaa Kumah-Crystal, who will be speaking at HIMSS19.
By Mike Miliard | 01:04 pm | January 18, 2019
AI will be key to the high-intensity modeling needed for personalized care – and New Zealand is offering a unique test bed for the development of new approaches.
By Bill Siwicki | 03:20 pm | January 17, 2019
Hospitals can use artificial intelligence-driven technologies to automate manual and expensive processes.
By Bill Siwicki | 01:09 pm | January 17, 2019
Connected care, upskilled workers, tax reform, a Southwest Airlines approach, private equity and the Affordable Care Act all will impact healthcare organizations in 2019, a new PwC report says.
By Benjamin Harris | 11:21 am | January 16, 2019
As machine learning rapidly expands into healthcare, the ways it "learns" may be at odds with clinical outcomes unless carefully controlled for, a new study shows.