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.
(Sponsored) Troy Ament, Fortinet's field CISO for healthcare, discusses how organizations can protect their data as ransomware attacks are increasingly impacting connected medical devices as well as patient care and safety.
(Sponsored) Dr. Adrienne Boissy, chief medical officer at Qualtrics, talks about how, even as digital transformation continues in healthcare, empathy is key to building connections and improving experiences for both patients and staff.
(Sponsored) Medical device security programs have matured in the last five years. Starting with visibility, HDOs are now asking questions on how that can be leveraged to improve care delivery, improve operations while improving cyber-resilience.
(Sponsored) Stephanie Trunzo, Oracle Health's senior vice president and general manager, talks about how Oracle can give providers, patients and payers the data, insights and intelligence they need to create a better patient experience.
David Lareau, CEO of Medicomp Systems, explains how technology and regulatory requirements are converging to enable more seamless data exchange for care coordination and patient empowerment – and why HIMSS22 is an ideal place to track that progress.
Mayo says it doesn't have the capacity to serve an ever-increasing number of patients and needs to remain a good steward with its contracted plans, and an Oklahoma City hospital was the target of COVID-19-related social media posts.
Mayo Clinic is able to send kidney and bone marrow transplant patients home to recover to a hospital level of care, says Medically Home CEO Rami Karjian.
Gregg Church, president of 4medica, explains how dangerous duplicate patient records are and how technology – including AI – can help providers and others build and maintain clean data, with data duplication rates as low as 1%.
(Sponsored) Richard Cramer, chief strategist for healthcare and life sciences at Informatica, works with leading healthcare organizations to reimagine health powered by accessible, trustworthy and fit for purpose.
The future includes decision-support tools, remote patient monitoring and digital therapeutics, says Jodi Daniel, partner in Crowell & Moring's Health Care Group.
QRS is accused of failing to secure, monitor and maintain protected health information and personally identified information in its patient portal, and New York's booster mandate aims to protect the health of a stretched-thin workforce.
Patient advocate Grace Cordovano speaks about how telehealth and virtual care have improved outcomes and made it easier for chronically ill patients to live fuller, more satisfying lives.