Workflow
The private hospital operator has started piloting Ramsay Scribe with plans to expand across inpatients and mental health outpatients.
The presence of hospital outcome data on EMS patient care reports in the National Emergency Medical Services Information System database improved in 2024. Data exchange progress is good news for patient care and could ultimately improve health outcomes.
Nursing and IT
At HIMSS25 in Las Vegas next month, members of the HIMSS Nursing Innovation Advisory will explore where artificial intelligence is finding favor with RNs, where they're skeptical of it – and how it can be deployed and integrated safely into practice.
As artificial intelligence and other digital health technologies make their mark, provider organizations need to pursue "organizational ambidexterity." Here's what that means, along with six tips for achieving it.
Lisa Stump, Mount Sinai Health System's new chief digital information officer, is helping chart a path forward, and is in charge of executing on the technology components of that vision. Here's her advice for her peers at other health systems.
Lisa Stump is helping helping create a five-year strategic plan for the New York health system – bolstering a digital strategy and developing a comprehensive enterprise digital ecosystem.
American Medical Association researchers found that artificial intelligence in healthcare sparked more enthusiasm among physicians in 2024, increasing 5% over the previous year, while their use of AI tools increased by 28%.
More providers are finding artificial intelligence can reduce clinician burnout and lower recruiting costs. Meanwhile, tech vendors on the frontier of agentic AI innovation are looking to healthcare as a first use case.
At the HIMSS25 Smart Health Transformation Forum, health system execs will explore value propositions of the latest digital tools. Esther Kim of Mass General Brigham, Kali Arduini Idhe of Northwestern Medicine and Marcee Chmait of Providence discuss.
Initial findings from a three-year analysis from athenahealth suggest the idea that providers' use of digital patient outreach tools increase documentation burdens is a misconception.