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Analytics

By Bill Siwicki | 02:09 pm | February 27, 2019
To help combat the opioid crisis, the medical center invested in inventory and analytics technology that helps accurately and consistently identify cases of drug diversion.
By Bill Siwicki | 03:32 pm | February 26, 2019
After two governance attempts that stalled, the University of Vermont Health Network finally finds success after bringing in a tech and consulting firm for some unbiased, third-party help.
By HIMSS TV | 01:42 pm | February 25, 2019
Data from Current Health’s wireless device is analyzed and shared with healthcare providers to improve the outcomes of high-risk patients at home, says CEO Christopher McCann.
By Mike Miliard | 01:14 pm | February 25, 2019
The online resource from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid services gives healthcare providers and communities better visibility into controlled substance prescribing patterns.
By Staff Writer | 01:00 am | February 25, 2019
Deakin University has unveiled a new institute for health transformation, bringing together more than 200 multi-disciplinary researchers and industry partners to address the complex healthcare challenges of today. Speaking at the recent AFR Healthcare Summit, Deakin University Institute for Health Transformation Inaugural Director Professor Anna Peeters said the first of such an institute in Australia aims to integrate translational research in prevention and population health, health systems and services, health economics and financing, as well as data intelligence and digital health. “We need to look into how we can design systems so that we can both improve population health and at the same time, improve patient experience and reduce healthcare costs per person,” she said. “From a research perspective, we need more research into knowledge translation and implementation research. We know what makes people more well and what treats conditions, but know less well how to organise the systems to get the best patient experiences and patient outcomes in the most experienced ways. “The Institute for Health Transformation was created to try and fill some of those gaps.” The vision for the Institute for Health Transformation is to work together across different levels of partnerships – industry, governments and academia – to transform health and care. “There is a need to place solutions in a more systemic context and this context is much broader than the healthcare industry alone. We need to integrate multiple, relevant partnerships to identify these potential solutions; we don’t do it well enough yet. And we need to do it using our available resources efficiently,” Peeters said. According to Peeters, this results in a more integrated approach to research themes, as opposed to siloed and traditional perspectives. “It’s not a traditional research model; it’s not a traditional health model, nor is it a traditional government model. This integrated approach brings about a capacity for agile partnerships,” she said. “And putting the person at the centre of this is critical, whether it’s to optimise transitions in care, activate healthy populations and communities, improve health services delivery and design, or drive equity and impact.” To do that, Peeters said the institute needs strong capabilities in data and digital health, health economics, systems approaches and knowledge translation research. “To fulfill the needs of a healthcare ecosystem that we’re trying to develop, there needs to be a beneficial research ecosystem. The traditional ways of research just aren’t going to work for these issues or the modeling, commercialisation and scaling of these solutions,” she said. “The Institute for Health Transformation is an agile manner to take the solutions identified further.” [Read more: New Leukaemia Foundation research funding to prevent deaths from stem cell transplants | Garvan implements superpowered IT infrastructure to push scientific boundaries in genomics research] Peeters also said that the creation of this institute will result in the need for a newer research workforce. “There will be a need for people who have skills across multiple sectors, multiple disciplines and those with a focus on capacity building and development. That’s not how people are currently trained.” She also said that the clinical data that currently exists needs to become more easily available. “The data isn’t easily liked, it’s not easily analysed. There are a lot of protection issues that exist and a lack of official systems around how we do data IP, data sharing, etc. So, how can we free that up and develop it in a comprehensive way? “These are going to be quite critical in creating a proper framework and getting the most out of our research ecosystem.
By Bill Siwicki | 01:46 pm | February 20, 2019
Further, gaining the ability to accelerate physical therapy sped up recovery time and decreased length of stay, which freed beds, brought in more patients and increased surgical volume to drive revenue.
By Tom Sullivan | 10:37 am | February 20, 2019
Info-blocking ruled the day, while APIs, FHIR, artificial intelligence and virtual reality were also prominent themes at this year’s Global Conference.
By Bill Siwicki | 01:21 pm | February 15, 2019
Hologic has launched a new tool that manages mammography devices, while SPH Analytics has partnered with Medecision with the aim of improved quality of care and lower costs.
By Tom Sullivan | 12:57 pm | February 15, 2019
At HIMSS19, DeVore mapped out the five problems that must be addressed to transform the industry.