Women In Health IT
Research from Accenture and Girls Who Code is out with the classic good news, bad news regarding women in the computing workforce. The bad news? The number of women in the U.S. computing workforce will decline from 24 percent to 22 percent by 2025, the research shows.
The findings continue to disappoint, disturb.
Mandira Singh: athenahealth’s disrupter-in-chief talks innovation, inspiration, entrepreneurship, m…
Describes the cloud-based EHR company’s culture as encouraging experimenting without fear of failing.
For starters, be a sponge and ask a lot of questions.
Supply of mobile health apps greatly exceeds the demand for them, based on research2guidance’s report on the mHealth App Developer Economics 2016, analyzing the status and trends of the mobile health apps market.
"I want you to remember something: Past is prologue," said Rometty at the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing in Houston, billed as the largest gathering of women technologists in the world.
Technology giant Dell is partnering with Girls Who Code, a national nonprofit dedicated to closing the gender gap in technology.
I was running late in wrapping up a meeting before my next one.
The EHR market has become a media battleground, she said, rather than vendors competing on quality of products and services. So she, and the PR machine Epic is assembling, are girding for the fight.
After stepping back from her post, Sue Schade has been fortunate to watch University Hospitals new CIO Joy Grosser take charge. Schade shares insights she learned during the transition.