HIMSS TV
Personal and medical data is very valuable to cybercriminals on the dark web, says Van Steel, shareholder in LBMC's cybersecurity division, who discusses his work with the HIMSS Tennessee chapter to help protect users' healthcare information.
In a preview of their upcoming HIMSS25 education session, leaders with the health system's Agile Practice Office explain the benefits of Scrum and Kanban in healthcare operations.
At HIMSS25, Claroty's Ty Greenhalgh and St. Luke's University Health's Mike Powers will unveil the HSCC's updated MC2 Framework and address challenges in negotiating medical device cybersecurity contract provisions.
Commure Chief Strategy Officer Ian Shakil discusses the evolution of voice-enabled charting, and explains how Commure's acquisition of his scribe automation company, Augmedix, can help expand the technology's impact across healthcare.
Keimyung University Dongsan Medical Center in South Korea has been testing AI technology to detect dementia and other neurodegenerative conditions, shares president Dr Chi-heum Cho.
Luke Rutledge, president of Homecare Homebase, says a 0.5% payment increase in the rule does not meet demands of the inflation rate and staffing.
HIMSS senior digital health advisor Widi Salim says the AMAM24 now helps hospitals shift their focus from data to actual analytics outcomes.
Dr. Samuel Browd of UW and Seattle Children's hospital, and the CMO at Proprio, discusses the questions he's hearing from patients about artificial intelligence in healthcare, and describes how AI is changing how he practices and performs surgery.
The hospital in Busan, which conducts 40,000 surgeries each year, has been developing various medical AI assistants through the government's Dr Answer project, says Dr Hoseok I, vice president and CIO at Pusan National University Hospital.
Etay Maor, Cato Networks' chief security strategist, will demonstrate jailbreaking, prompt injections and other real-world attacks at a HIMSS25 session focused on the use of artificial intelligence in healthcare.