Data Warehousing
Francisco Partners has completed its purchase of Watson Health's data analytics tools and is spinning them off into an Ann Arbor, Michigan-based business.
1upHealth's CSO, Don Rucker, MD, and CEO Joe Gagnon discuss the centrality of interoperability, and how 1upHealth helps uncover care data for providers, patients and payers via FHIR conversion.
Meanwhile, HHS publishes guidance on "strengthening cyber posture" but healthcare organizations are asking for more government help managing their security challenges.
Paul Muret, vice president and general manager of Google for Clinicians, and Aashima Gupta, director of global healthcare solutions for Google Cloud, discuss what tools Google is building to help clinicians make more informed decisions.
Health IT leaders and federal officials have spent years attempting to solve the challenges Larry Ellison says his company can fix. Many experts are skeptical. But if Oracle can make it happen, it would be a major achievement for healthcare.
That should be a "wake-up call to C-level executives," says an exec from Saviynt, which sponsored the survey, since it "fuels the risk of rising identity and access-related attacks and their financial consequences."
With the Cerner acquisition now complete, Oracle's co-founder and CTO says his company will build a national EHR database to address interoperability challenges for patients, providers and public health agencies.
"In order for health systems to be successful, we need evidence-based assessment to be able to understand that the care we are delivering is effective and efficient," the COO says.
But healthcare organizations have gotten better at responding to this new normal, the new survey indicates, with hospitals now able to restore more encrypted data after attacks.
Small changes in income can cause people's eligibility to shift between California's ACA and Medicaid programs. When bad information is typed into – or accurate information is deleted from – a shared computer system, enrollees can get big headaches.