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Hear about new healthcare technology for improving patient and clinician experiences, and visit one of the most popular booths, where attendees stood in line to get some "puppy love,” all from the HIMSS23 exhibit hall.
While sharing insights on the medical device industry in China at HIMSS23, David Chen, director of business development for Shine Technology, stresses the importance of partnering to further new technologies.
It's crucial to pool resources to improve outcomes during times of crisis, says Dr. Monica Bharel, advanced clinical senior public health advisor and former commissioner of the Massachusetts Department of Public Health.
A shortage of skilled nursing is disrupting care delivery nationwide. The workforce challenge is not going away, and will require creative approaches, including virtual care, says Wendy Deibert, chief nursing officer at Caregility.
Dr. Adrienne Boissy, Qualtrics' chief medical officer and staff neurologist at the Cleveland Clinic, explains that, because consumers are making value-based decisions and care about privacy, they should be codesigning healthcare AI.
Discussing the value and potential disruption of generative AI for healthcare, the chief medical information officer sees big value ahead from large language models, but says he's taking a cautiously deliberative approach to deploying them.
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According to AWS International Government Health Lead Nicky Murphy, providers can improve their productivity and resilience by migrating to cloud. Cloud platforms also offer native AI and machine learning tools.
An "unwritten requirement" can help healthcare organizations understand their environments and examine vulnerabilities to protect ePHI, says Chad Peterson, managing director at NetSPI.
Open algorithms, explainable AI and thoughtful approaches to understanding and addressing the health equity of sub-cohorts end the legacy argument that AI is a "black box," says Andrew Eye, cofounder and CEO of ClosedLoop.ai.
The newly released Apple Vision Pro augmented reality headset has potential in medicine, including how its eye-tracking technology could affect a surgeon's performance, says Sam Glassenberg, founder and CEO of Level Ex.