Monday, March 9, 2015

How big data will transform healthcare

Big data has the potential to transform healthcare.
Sensors, public health records, electronic medical records, genomic data and mobile health apps offer detailed information that could lead to new insights into disease prevention and treatment.

The biggest challenge is building innovative technology solutions to pull all the data together.


Link to full article: http://bit.ly/BigDataPotential

Sunday, February 1, 2015

Social media for mHealth marketing: understanding the true costs

Social media platforms are free, but there are hidden costs involved to using them as effective mHealth marketing tools.


This interesting article goes into more detail: http://bit.ly/1jC2WPA

Thursday, January 15, 2015

EHRs vs. traditional paper records

How do Electronic Health Records and the traditional paper versions compare?
The Institute for Health Technology Transformation has put together an interesting infographic.
Key point: EHRs could lead to significant savings over the years, reducing time spent entering data.


Please find the infographic, as well as the original article, here: http://bit.ly/1laSjPf

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

A patient's story matters more than a computer checklist

When doctors spend more time talking to the information technology team than they do caring for their patients.
An essay worth reading.


Illustration by Daniel Horowitz for NPR


Full text here: http://bit.ly/1jkrSWx


Sunday, November 16, 2014

"Life as a CIO is like boiling the frog"

Interesting insight into the life of a CIO: is this job becoming an impossible one?



Link to full article: http://bit.ly/1bBxUh9

Saturday, October 18, 2014

Indian hospitals could show U.S. hospitals how to save money without cutting quality

The biggest challenge facing U.S. health care is reducing costs while improving quality of care and access for patients.
The experience of a few innovative Indian hospitals may point the way forward, showing that costs can be dramatically reduced and access can be expanded even as quality is improved.


Read more here: http://wapo.st/HJHBTA

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Mobile health and EHRs likely to decrease visits to the doctor

Researchers at Johns Hopkins analyzed recent trends in digital health care, concluding that mobile health and EHRs will help reduce in-person doc visits and resolve future physician shortages.



Read all the details here: http://cnet.co/1aaHFVQ

Saturday, August 23, 2014

EHRs at risk of becoming irrelevant and obsolete

The ability to communicate and capture data in real time through mobile devices and wearable sensors has made typical EHRs obsolete.
EHR vendors will need to find a way to modify their products to focus on data that the patient and his care team want, or they'll become irrelevant.




Link to full article: http://bit.ly/1dJSVfP

Monday, July 14, 2014

Solving the IT talent problem

Business-savvy IT executives can be hard to come by. An interesting article by Martha Heller shares some ideas that may help solving the technology workforce crisis.




Read the complete text here: http://bit.ly/19QgiQB

Thursday, June 5, 2014

Doctors dissatisfied with current EHRs

Poor EHR usability, time-consuming data entry, interference with face-to-face patient care, inefficient and less fulfilling work content, inability to exchange health information between EHR products and degradation of clinical documentation are important sources of professional dissatisfaction among doctors, according to a recent survey.




Read all the details here: http://bit.ly/1gYzNgf