Analytics
Analytics
Feeding data directly from a medical device into medical records has reduced errors, improved patient safety and increased caregiver efficiency.
A guide to AI, machine learning and new workflow technologies at HIMSS17, Part 3: DevOps and workfl…
Charles Webster, MD, MSIE, MSIS (a HIMSS17 Social Media Ambassador and @wareFLO on Twitter) researched which vendor is showing what, and where on the show floor. The final part of his series focuses on container and microservices orchestration technology.
A guide to AI, machine learning and new workflow technologies at HIMSS17: Part 2 : chatbots and wor…
Charles Webster, MD, MSIE, MSIS (a HIMSS17 Social Media Ambassador and @wareFLO on Twitter) comprehensively researched which vendor is showing what, and where, on the show floor. Part two in his three-part series focuses on the fascinating connection between workflow and conversational user interfaces and chatbots.
A guide to AI, machine learning and new workflow technologies at HIMSS17 Part 1: Machine learning a…
Charles Webster, MD, (a HIMSS17 Social Media Ambassador and @wareFLO on Twitter) comprehensively researched which vendor is showing what, and where, on the show floor. Part one in his three-part series focuses on the workflow technology increasingly powering data science and machine learning.
"Data is the currency of the next century," says Brian Ahier. And nowhere are health data and data management processes discussed, analyzed and examined more than at the HIMSS Annual Conference and Exhibition.
Winner of a HIMSS Most Influential Women in Health IT Award dedicates the honor to all women in hea…
Shareefa Albulmonem, head of eServices, Office of the CIO at King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center in Saudi Arabia, is one of seven women being honored by HIMSS with a Most Influential Women in Health IT Award.
David Higginson explains how tapping into big data enabled it to reduce dosing mistakes among pediatric patients.
Atop the list: Emerging EHR functionality, cybersecurity, analytics and, of course, the next big thing.
Penn Medicine chief information officer Mike Restuccia reflects on the year that was and glances ahead to 2017.
A former CIO gets a close up look of the assessment side