Clinical
Patient Engagement
Dr. Manish Kohli, HIMSS Enterprise Board Chair, discusses physician burn-out and delivering insights for better clinical decision making, adding that success will come when the technology becomes invisible while patients are in front of doctors and nurses.
Analytics
From the research lab to the bedside to the back office, AI and machine learning are transforming the ways we think about care and how we develop treatments.
Patient Engagement
Dr. Shafi Ahmed, CMO, Medical Realities, says that clinicians can be inventors, and embrace change – as he learned at the UK's Royal London Hospital – by ensuring the patient voice remains prominent when developing innovative strategies at a leadership level.
Dzulkefly Ahmad, Malaysia's minister of health, says that even if an organization has a good program and system in place, digitizing healthcare will not succeed if there is no clinical buy-in underpinned by training.
The time it takes to take a test has been reduced from 30 minutes to 15 minutes, freeing up technicians to do other clinical work.
The traditional model of outpatient care is creating unnecessary pressure on patients, clinicians and the NHS as a whole, a new report from the UK's Royal College of Physicians (RCP) has warned.
HIMSS Analytics Regional Director for Europe and Latin America John Rayner details Turkey’s progress in digitizing public hospitals as more than 160 organizations are recognized at Stage 6 of the Electronic Medical Record Adoption Model (EMRAM).
Connected Health
The American Medical Association launched the Integrated Health Model Initiative to bring unorganized data together for a collaborative validation process and Jesse Ehrenfeld, president-elect of the AMA, explains how they plan to do it.
Juniper
Chad Wilson, director of information security at Children’s National, explains how timely access to applications in a healthcare setting is measured in seconds so the balance between usability and security is a big challenge.
Mobile Health IT
Manal Almalki, of Jazan University in Saudi Arabia, is empowering patients to monitor their health at home so they can gain insights into their own body using wearables; the tool is also aggregating data during the patient-run experiments.