HIMSS TV is your Insider’s Guide to everything HIMSS. We are the world’s first online broadcasting network, focused on global innovation and how information and technology are driving change in healthcare.
Healthbox provides services that help health systems set priorities using the HIMSS Maturity Models as a trusted resource to get them from where they are to where they want to be, explains Justin Gernot, vice president of the HIMSS solution.
The organization's ultimate goal is to use analytics to reduce administrative waste in healthcare, says CEO Brian Robertson.
Enhancing communications was a way for the health network to focus on the patient experience in a more robust way, says Hope Johnson, administrator of perioperative services at Lehigh Valley Health Network.
Patientory's population health, data analytics and patient engagement app is built on a decentralized blockchain network, says CEO Chrissa McFarlane.
The company is bringing its interoperability, data and insights to American shores in a bid to reach beyond its European roots, says GM Damon Auer.
We have to ask what the patients want, says Jen Horonjeff, founder and CEO of Savvy Cooperative.
Daniel Kraft, MD, founder of Digital.Health, a formulary of digital health devices and solutions, talks about the potential for technological innovations to make healthcare more personalized, equitable and affordable.
Healthcare data is becoming more interoperable, liquid and usable across the ecosystem, says Amit Trivedi, director of Informatics & Health IT Standards at HIMSS.
Nick Knowlton, VP of Strategic Initiatives at ResMed, discusses his company's work on interoperability for post-acute care.
AR Consultants' Dr. Barry Newman discusses with HIMSS TV host Kate Milliken and HIMSS Media Editor in Chief Jonah Comstock what's gone wrong with EHRs and how to set them back on the right course.
The future is to build a worldwide network for diverse data on a global scale, says Derek Baird, president, North America, Sensyne Health.
Life Image offers a patient-focused "PHR" to store individual imaging and other medical records, says Cristin Gardner, the company's vice president of product.