Business Intelligence
At Penn Medicine, integrated product teams – comprising data scientists, physicians and software engineers, among others – are helping improve AI and machine learning applications.
Here’s what executives need to know now about embarking on the journey by implementing applications to build a smart network of solutions.
Transforming healthcare usability must include standardization to evaluate effectiveness, efficiency and satisfaction.
Some 18 percent of U.S. consumers use a wearable device, according to the 2016 UPS Pulse of the Online Shopper survey.
Despite the ever increasing pace at which the healthcare industry—and HIM—is moving forward, through information governance (IG) pilot programs, we also see leaders making time to envision a future with IG playing a central role.
(SPONSORED) How to rise above all the marketing chatter is perhaps one of the most difficult marketing questions to tackle.
Editor's note: This is the second segment in Roy Smythe’s two-part interview with Dr. George Day on the nature and application of science-based innovation to advance the new model of healthcare.
Roy Smythe, MD, interviewed Dr. George Day to drill down into the science of innovation and give readers some flavor of the need to understand innovation at this level.
As patient payments constitute upwards of 30 percent of hospital revenues, leveraging technology that works across different healthcare information systems can streamline and maximize payment collections, while keeping patients happier and making them more likely to pay their medical bills on time.
With risk-aversion, prior investments and a misaligned payment system standing in the way, how can we bring about true transformation?