Videos
Emerging healthcare and medical device startups from Israel show off their technology at HIMSS19.
Neil Jordan, Worldwide Health Leader and Connector at Microsoft, recounts how an AI-powered app for monitoring children who go home following complex heart surgery prevented tragedy.
Providers are finally deploying and scaling cloud computing, according Vik Nagjee of Sirius Computer Solutions and the Cleveland Clinic.
Cloud-based tools can help providers build and deploy improved workflows and processes, according to ServiceNow's Paul McRae.
Getting insights about a patient's environment and lifestyle is just as critical as understanding genomic data, according to University of Colorado Assistant Professor Mustafa Ozkaynak.
The organization is partnering with Providence St. Joseph to enable clinicians to apply insights that help patients be more compliant, says ResMed's VP of SaaS Strategy Annie McBride.
Look for creative and curious people who like to solve problems and want to know that what they’ve done is actually working, says Neil Gomes, Chief Digital Officer at Jefferson Health.
Dr. Anthony Chang, medical director at CHOC Children’s, says artificial intelligence won’t replace the empathy doctors can provide to patients but smart machines can reduce the time clinicians spend on computers.
Even though machine learning has great potential, James Weese, system vice president at Aurora Healthcare, says most of the trials he's seen have not been successful.
Advancements in healthcare technology are necessary, but they can’t take away the human element, says Tammy Kwiatkoski, director of clinical informatics for the HIMSS Office of the CTIO.