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.
Monthly Update: HIMSS Media Editor in Chief Jonah Comstock recaps some big stories from the month of March, including policy updates, big tech moves and how to sign up for a vaccine at three major pharmacy chains.
The IT leader talks about how Penn State has managed population health during the pandemic with help from EHR tweaks, telehealth, data sharing via CommonWell and more. He also highlights some things healthcare can learn from other industries.
The longtime chief information officer and practicing physician at Boston Children's discusses what it's like to take on a new top job during a pandemic, and describes his plans for vaccine distribution, telehealth and remote monitoring across Maine.
Amazon Care's primary and urgent care services will no longer be available only to the company's Washington employees; Doctor on Demand and Grand Rounds form a new virtual healthcare company.
(Sponsored) Troy Ament, field CISO of healthcare/pharma at Fortinet, explains why it is "super critical" that security is fundamentally and foundationally embedded into that transformation, and not just bolted on.
Dr. Uché Blackstock weighs in on strategies to work toward true equity in healthcare.
Nurx CEO Varsha Rao joins host Jonah Comstock and MobiHealthNews Managing Editor Laura Lovett to discuss the female-focused telehealth company's expansion from contraception to dermatology, migraines and more.
Researchers Dr. Lauren Eberly and Dr. Srinath Adusumalli discuss their wide-ranging study on who's using virtual care – and who may be getting left behind.
The effects of the pandemic continue to push margins, volumes and outpatient revenues below the performance of the prior year, while HHS Secretary nominee Xavier Becerra signals support for virtual care.
The longtime chief information officer discusses the challenges of remote work for IT staff, having to hit pause on a big implementation due to the pandemic and what it means to serve the community during times of crisis.
(Sponsored) There's been a regression in the use of virtual health since its huge spike at the beginning of the pandemic; the answer is changing the operating model, not better technology, say The Chartis Group's Thomas Kiesau and Gregg Mohrmann.
Rolling financial forecasting and the creative use of health IT are guiding hospital leaders through the public health emergency, while 43 states have implemented some form of telehealth commercial payer law.