Eric Wicklund
The Boston-based healthcare network, through its affiliated Center for Connected Health, is now collecting data from home-based medical devices and posting that information in its medical records platform.
The Silicon Valley company has moved beyond simple data-recording to enable diabetics and their physicians to view and chart – and act on – information in real time.
The California congressman is advocating creating an Office of Wireless Health within the FDA, among other things.
The new partnership is the latest link between telemedicine providers and EMR developers, and a sign that the two platforms may be slowly moving toward integration.
The company, working in conjunction with AeroScout, bolsters its Wi-Fi-based RTLS platform to enable hospital staff to track newborns in any part of the hospital that's covered by Wi-Fi.
The Massachusetts-based developer of the Online Care telehealth platform has added to its portfolio with deals with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts and BlueCross BlueShield of Louisiana.
The insurer is partnering with AMC Health to provide in-home monitoring solutions to 450 Medicare Advantage members, with real-time data measured against national standards of care.
The Massachusetts-based developer of mobile clinical resources for medical professionals is now giving them a platform to keep up on the latest news and alerts.
The California HealthCare Foundation has put more than $1 million into the Wisconsin-based developer of an mHealth platform for people with asthma and COPD.
The platform allows hospitals like Liberty Health's Jersey City Medical Center to coordinate communications between physicians, nurses and other staff on their mobile devices of choice.