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Analytics

By Bernie Monegain | 11:45 am | May 04, 2016
IBM is making quantum computing available to the public, providing access to a platform from any desktop or mobile device via the IBM Cloud.
By Jessica Davis | 12:28 pm | May 03, 2016
In response to the ongoing water crisis in Flint, Michigan, Google.org, the company's charitable arm, is donating $250,000 to provide technical resources to help resolve the water issues now and in the future.
By Mike Miliard | 12:22 pm | May 03, 2016
UMMC CHIO John Showalter, MD, describes what associative data lakes, honest brokers and more mean to becoming a learning health system.
By Tom Sullivan | 12:06 pm | May 03, 2016
IBM Watson said it will provide free storage to nonprofit organizations and academic medical center researchers using Apple’s ResearchKit. But developers looking to tap into the supercomputer's analytics will have to pay.
By Bernie Monegain | 10:56 am | May 03, 2016
The health system’s CIO said implementing the platform will enable it to improve care while reducing cost and risk.
By Tom Sullivan | 10:23 am | May 03, 2016
SQL Server 2016 will bring new functions for protecting data in motion and at rest, visual reporting, cloud-first features and big data analytics tools.
By Kathy Downing | 02:54 pm | May 02, 2016
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.
By Jessica Davis | 12:37 pm | April 28, 2016
The analytics software used by the staff at St. Joseph Healthcare in Bangor, Maine, sits on top of the statewide health information exchange, allowing providers to access real-time data from all hospitals connected to the HIE.
By Bill Siwicki | 11:59 am | April 27, 2016
By and large, population health measurement efforts are poorly developed and uncoordinated – and without effective measurement success will remain elusive, says Georgetown's Michael A. Stoto.
By Bernie Monegain | 11:12 am | April 27, 2016
Geisinger Health System has enlisted 100,000 people for its genomic study and did so more quickly than expected. Attracting so many volunteers over two years has prompted program executives to raise the bar to 250,000 or more participants.