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By Brian Dolan | 07:49 pm | February 23, 2011
By Bernie Monegain | 01:50 pm | February 23, 2011
Promoting a two-heads-are-better-than-one approach, Baylor Health System's David Muntz and consultant Stuart Gardner called for greater collaboration between IT departments and clinical engineering during a Tuesday afternoon session at HIMSS11.It's to everyone's advantage, said Muntz, senior vice president and CIO of Dallas-based Baylor, which operates 26 hospitals and facilities at 160 locations. In fact, he called for "radical collaboration," to which Gardner agreed.
By Bernie Monegain | 01:41 pm | February 23, 2011
Information technology could be a catalyst for improving global health, said Patricia Abbott, associate professor at the Johns Hopkins Center for Global Health and co-director of the PAHO/WHO Collaborating Center for Nursing Knowledge, Information Management and Sharing.But she warned her audience Tuesday at HIMSS11 that the promise of IT might fail if "it's thought of in purely western terms."Abbott urged attendees to think of IT through the lens of poverty reduction, human rights and local and cultural context.
By Mike Miliard | 02:13 pm | February 22, 2011
Cisco's annual Community for Connected Health Summit offered HIMSS11 attendees on Monday a forum for education and idea-sharing - discussing hot-button topics in healthcare and unveiling promising new product prototypes.The morning was devoted to perspectives on innovation and emerging trends in healthcare services, taking stock of the economic imperatives that affect care delivery and examining how they can be shifted. Presentations focused on the "disruptive" IT advancement that will continue to transform medicine in the coming years.
By Mike Miliard | 03:00 pm | February 18, 2011
MedPlus, the healthcare information technology subsidiary of Quest Diagnostics, has announced the general availability of its next release of Care360 EHR solution designed to significantly enhance the interoperability of Care360 EHR by supporting the Direct Project specifications, which were established by the Direct Project under the coordination of the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC).
By Molly Merrill | 10:31 pm | February 17, 2011
Although social media has the potential to have a positive impact on healthcare, there is need for greater accountability and guidelines, especially for physicians who may be risking their patients' privacy, according to a researcher from George Washington School of Medicine and Health Sciences. According to Katherine Chretien, MD, associate professor of medicine, some physicians who are regular users of Twitter are disseminating unethical and unprofessional content.