Women In Health IT
As more data has emerged about telehealth after the initial spike in March 2020, many industry-watchers, providers and patients are seeking to dig into who's using virtual care – and who's eased off.
During a panel at CES, leaders at digital therapeutic companies discuss the state of the market right now and what’s needed to boost adoption.
Houston Methodist had been planning to implement a VICU for several years, Chief Innovation Officer Roberta Schwartz explains in a preview of her upcoming HIMSS22 session – but the pandemic led the health system to speed up the process.
A new study found that behavioral and primary care physicians were also more likely to make a readier shift to telemedicine, as opposed to surgical specialists.
Evaluating algorithms' efficacy often takes a lot more effort, as Johns Hopkins Machine Learning and Healthcare Lab Director Suchi Saria explained, with tips, at the HIMSS Machine Learning and AI for Healthcare Forum.
Artificial intelligence's potential role in preoperative and intraoperative planning – and surgical robotics – is significant.
The programme is seeking its first 25 participants.
Jacki Monson, who is also chief technology risk officer and chief privacy officer at Sutter, previews her HIMSS Healthcare Cybersecurity Forum virtual session – where she'll discuss stakeholder alignment and "privacy and security by design."
Maria Palombini, a leader at the IEEE Standards Association, discusses the work of four high-profile women in healthcare standards creation – and highlights what women bring to the process.
Artificial intelligence can optimize patient care and reduce clinician burnout, says Selwa A. F. Al-Hazzaa, MD, founder and CEO of Saudi Development Med.