What do patients and healthcare professionals think of EHRs?
SelectHub, a tech selection management company, surveyed 1,007 Americans and 107 healthcare professionals to gain insight into their thoughts on electronic health records.
SelectHub, a tech selection management company, surveyed 1,007 Americans and 107 healthcare professionals to gain insight into their thoughts on electronic health records.
A new study from Doximity, a physician social network, found a significant language gap between physicians and patients is prevalent in cities such as Washington, D.C., Minneapolis and Boston.
The Sunnyvale, California-based startup said it will use the investment to further develop its analytics platform, which can be used to identify patients with risks for 43 chronic diseases.
A new survey from WebMD, Medscape and STAT dug deeper into the prevalence of patient bias. Among 822 physician respondents, 59 percent said they'd heard a derogatory remark about their personal characteristics from a patient within the past five years.
Telemedicine and EHR vendors figured into deals involving Medtronic, CVS and Zocdoc, among other businesses.
During the keynote at MedCity INVEST Twin Cities, Zipnosis cofounder and CEO Jon Pearce discussed how the three amigos of healthcare — the patient, the provider and the payer — are key to digital health adoption.
Munck Wilson Mandala Partner Greg Howison shared his perspective on some of the legal ramifications around AI, IP, connected devices and the data they generate, in response to emailed questions.
In September, two articles in The New England Journal of Medicine presented differing perspectives on the HITECH era. Now, a new blog post from UCSF's Center for Digital Health Innovation poses a third perspective focused on patients.
The corporate investment arm of Peoria, Illinois-based OSF HealthCare is investing in the New Haven, Connecticut-based company's technology, which seeks to improve the patient experience.
Menlo Park, California-based HighBar Partners led the round. Psilos Group, TPG, Camden Partners and Merck Global Health Innovation Fund also participated.
In December 2016 and January 2017, Reach Health surveyed 436 healthcare experts to uncover their telemedicine program objectives as well as the challenges they face.
Gabby Everett, the site director for BioLabs Pegasus Park, offered a tour of the space and shared some examples of why early-stage life science companies should choose North Texas.
In a recent phone interview, newly minted Cleveland Clinic CIO Edward Marx discussed his position, how to avoid pilot purgatory and his organization's "patients first" mantra.
Seattle-based macro-eyes, a machine learning company, has unveiled Sibyl, a predictive scheduling solution that utilizes AI to find the best appointment time for the provider and the patient.
In an effort to reduce medical errors and potential misunderstandings, the New Jersey Innovation Institute is developing a "Master Person Index," which will serve as a master database of each New Jersey resident's health-related information.
To help their patients better remember bits of information, more and more doctors are, with their patients' consent, recording appointments.
The medical records request process is cumbersome for patients and health systems alike. In a recent report, the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology detailed the problems with this process, as well as tips for improving it.