Bill Siwicki
One has a moat surrounding its products no one can get through while the other offers an open operating system for all to use.
Executives explain how the developer initiatives work and why they’re fueling innovation and shaping future direction of their platforms.
The pregnancy app, developed in-house with some help, allowed the hospital to improve its OB-maternity HCAHPS by 68 percent and cut printing costs for paper handouts by half.
Indianapolis, Indiana-based Community Health Network wanted to up its hiring game.
Health Wizz has updated and is piloting its unusual blockchain- and FHIR-enabled EHR aggregator mobile app, which uses blockchain to tokenize data, enabling patients to securely aggregate, organize, share, donate and/or trade their medical records.
Riverside Medical Clinic is the largest physician-owned practice in California.
Vecna Technologies, a developer of patient self-service systems, has integrated its onsite patient check-in platform with Imprivata's PatientSecure identification technology.
Miramont Family Medicine, a group practice in Fort Collins, Colorado, has four offices with staff and patients in each location.
The American Academy of Family Physicians and virtual care technology vendor Zipnosis are embarking on a partnership that will offer a virtual healthcare platform to AAFP's 129,000 members.
Since October 2016, when it started using a new telehealth technology, ConcertoHealth has seen 73 percent of its new e-consults replace the need for patients to see specialists face-to-face.