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HHS building in Washington, DC
By Andrea Fox | |
The mass layoffs have severely undercut essential IT, policy and contracting functions, and sources say they fear critical expertise has been lost. The government could hire contractors to fill the gaps, putting ousted employees in an ethical bind.
Dr. Jana Goldberg of Heartbeat Health on telecardiology
By Bill Siwicki | |
Nearly half of U.S. counties have no cardiologist nearby. A telecardiologist working at the heart of virtual care and cardiology today shows how the technology is helping with this and other challenges.
Tungs’ Taichung MetroHarbor Hospital's HIMSS EMRAM Stage 7 team
By Adam Ang | |
The hospital will also be aiming for Stage 7 INFRAM soon.
A nurse checking a patient's record on a digital tablet
By Adam Ang | |
The former senior patient service associate pled guilty to the charge.
CIO and hospital IT leaders meet
By Mike Miliard | |
CIOs and other healthcare technology decision-makers polled by Stoltenberg Consulting say reimbursement and workforce challenges are also top of mind as they continue to invest in artificial intelligence, cybersecurity and more.
Ben Wolf, partner in Alston & Bird’s Health Care Group
By Jessica Hagen | |
Ben Wolf, partner in Alston & Bird's Health Care Group, told MobiHealthNews how FDA staffing cuts could slow device approvals and what companies can do to stay ahead.
Patient talking to doctor on tablet
By Jeff Lagasse | |
The group is advocating for digital healthcare initiatives such as expanded access to virtual care and telehealth.
Parent holding baby
By Jessica Hagen | |
The acquisition brings the parties' cross-litigation alleging patent infringements to a close.
Dr. Travis Zack of the University of California at San Francisco on AI
By Bill Siwicki | |
The University of California at San Francisco's overarching goal was not to replace human judgment but to enhance it – allowing oncologists to focus on personalized treatment rather than spending valuable time retrieving and verifying information.
Healthcare billing office worker makes a correction
By Nathan Eddy | |
Almost 20% of healthcare workers polled recently said they spend more than 20 hours per month correcting billing errors. Artificial intelligence can help, but adding automation to billing systems is no easy task.