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Fast Company April 2012 Christina Chaey |
Stevi Riel Provides Partnerships With Hospitals To Find Affordable Help For Patients This year, the U.S. government started a program for health-care innovators. One innovator, Stevi Riel takes what physicians are too busy to do, and partners with hospitals to find affordable prescription solutions for underinsured patients.  |
Fast Company April 2012 Christina Chaey |
Srikant Iyer Streamlines Patient Care In Hectic Emergency Rooms This health-care innovator uses a different kind of triage system to identify who is very ill and who is mildly ill, keeping emergency room care moving.  |
InternetNews April 21, 2006 Tim Scannell |
An Active Hand in The Healing Process Hospitals are turning to the Internet and remote reporting technologies to get patients more involved in medical decision-making.  |
BusinessWeek January 7, 2010 Catherine Arnst |
Hospitals: Radical Cost Surgery A hospital that slashes costs - and delivers high-quality care as it innovates? Yes, it exists.  |
Fast Company April 2012 Lindsey Kratochwill |
How Jay Want Prescribes A Change In The Business Of Paying For Health Care This year, the U.S. government started a program for health-care innovators. One innovator, Jay Want sees a more efficient and cost-effective future for healthcare payments.  |
Science News March 28, 2009 |
Science Past For March 28, 1959 Thoughts on patient resocialization in a mental hospital during the 1950s.  |
BusinessWeek March 28, 2005 Mullaney & Weintraub |
The Digital Hospital Information technology saves lives and money at one medical center, perhaps becoming the future of health care.  |
BusinessWeek November 20, 2008 |
Financial Triage Innovative ways that hospitals are looking at patient finances.  |
CIO August 1, 2003 Galen Gruman |
Wireless: Just What the Doctor Ordered As medical records go electronic, hospital CIOs are finding that wireless networks can get the records to where the doctors and nurses want to use them. CIOs in other industries would do well to watch and learn.  |
BusinessWeek March 28, 2005 Timothy J. Mullaney |
Saving Lives Shouldn't Be This Hard The health-care system doesn't give patients the tools or the support they need to make confident decisions about choosing doctors, treatments, or hospitals.  |
BusinessWeek June 23, 2011 Drew Armstrong |
The Simplest Rx: Check on Your Patient Doctors and insurers cut costs by sharing information.  |
The Motley Fool November 20, 2008 Brian Orelli |
Like Coupons, Only Better Companies that provide medical products and services and are lowering their costs should do well in this environment.  |
CIO August 1, 2003 Sarah D. Scalet |
Paperless Medicine Saving Money, Saving Lives Health-care CIOs face intense pressure to install electronic medical records and order-entry systems, in spite of physician resistance and large up-front costs. Here's how early adopters are overcoming the obstacles.  |
BusinessWeek March 28, 2005 Andy Reinhardt |
A "Clinical Portal" Is Born An Oslo hospital's new homegrown system eliminates paper and digitizes medical records. It is among the most advanced in the world.  |
The Motley Fool November 24, 2009 Brian Orelli |
"Meaningful Use" Is Meaningfully Undefined The stimulus bill earlier this year provided $34 billion for doctors to trade in their pen and paper for a keyboard and monitor. But Washington wants to make sure the systems it's paying for are contributing to lowering health-care costs.  |
BusinessWeek January 31, 2005 Carol Marie Cropper |
Between You, The Doctor, And The PC More physicians and hospitals are putting their medical records online  |
Fast Company February 2010 Kate Rockwood |
An In-Depth Look at the Hospital of the Future The hospital of the future is designed not just to heal the sick but also to help sustain the environment.  |
Pharmaceutical Executive November 1, 2006 |
Alternative Media: Time to Change the Channel Upgraded hospital television and Internet systems equal new marketing opportunities.  |
BusinessWeek March 28, 2005 |
The Doctor: Dr. Lauren Koniaris Online prescribing and record-keeping free her up for patients.  |
The Motley Fool January 26, 2007 Jack Uldrich |
Big Blue Will See You Now A new medical-records search engine could streamline medical services and improve patient health. This system is just one more reason IBM makes a great blue chip investment.  |
CIO August 1, 2005 Susannah Patton |
An End to Medical Forms? Patients could keep all their medical information online using iHealthRecord, a new service that Medem (a joint venture of the American Medical Association and six other medical societies) introduced in May.  |
BusinessWeek March 28, 2005 |
Crusader for Clearer E-Info Entrepreneur Jonathan S. Bush -- yes he's related -- discusses how Web-based medical records can become a workable reality  |
BusinessWeek March 28, 2005 |
The Tech Guru: Dr. Gerard Burns A former trauma surgeon champions life-saving data  |
HBS Working Knowledge June 29, 2015 Dina Gerdeman |
Consumer-centered Health Care Depends on Accessible Medical Records John Quelch discusses approaches to integrate patient data so that medical professionals and patients can make better decisions.  |
BusinessWeek June 25, 2009 Catherine Arnst |
The Family Doctor: A Remedy for Health-Care Costs? How making primary-care physicians the center of America's health-care system could drive down costs.  |
Managed Care June 2006 Twanmoh & Cunningham |
When Overcrowding Paralyzes an Emergency Department Changing the process and mindset of health care professionals was the key to reducing emergency department overcrowding.  |
BusinessWeek April 23, 2009 Catherine Arnst |
Doctors' Pride: A Hurdle to Digital Medicine A forerunner in New England found that some physicians would sooner cut ties than see their elite status threatened.  |
BusinessWeek May 29, 2006 Howard Gleckman |
Medicine's Industrial Revolution Medical treatments that are proven to work reach only about half of the Americans who need them, according to a series of studies by RAND Corp. And in hospitals, simple measures that protect patients' lives are often hard to implement.  |
CIO December 15, 2009 Kim S. Nash |
Data Sharing That Benefits Customers At Children's Hospital Boston, sharing more data, securely, promises healthier, more satisfied patients.  |
PC Magazine September 26, 2007 Tracy McNamara |
Doctors Without Wires New wireless technology could help improve health care and cut medical bills.  |
InternetNews June 14, 2010 |
Lax Data Security Results in Heavy Fines Five California hospitals got an expensive reminder of just how serious the state is about protecting patients' sensitive data. Expect more of the same in the near future.  |
The Motley Fool August 28, 2009 Brian Orelli |
Your Doctor Is Killing You ... Financially What the doctor does has a big effect on how much health care costs.  |
BusinessWeek April 1, 2010 Kerry Capell |
Remote Health Care: Body Parts Make Phone Calls Facing saturated markets, cellular carriers are jumping into the revolution of mobile technology that identifies and acts on medical problems.  |
American Family Physician January 15, 2002 Robert H. Shackelford |
Diary from a Week in Practice Loss reminded us of the fragility of life, and also emphasized the importance of teamwork and constant office preparedness for emergencies... In a fairly stable community, providing longitudinal care is one of the most rewarding aspects of family practice... etc.  |
CFO May 1, 2009 Josh Hyatt |
Strong Medicine Boosted by a substantial injection of cash from the federal stimulus bill, electronic medical records may help relieve the pain of rising premiums by improving efficiencies in the medical system.  |
AskMen.com Tara Weiss |
Reasons Not To Become A Doctor There were once many rewards to being in the medical profession. For decades, doctors earned hefty paychecks, had autonomy and respect. Those benefits are fading, and as a result, so is the number of doctors.  |
Managed Care February 2008 |
Headlines on Deadline... Blue Cross & Blue Shield wants to stop paying doctors and hospitals for each patient visit or treatment, and instead wants to pay a flat sum per patient each year.  |
Managed Care June 2003 Maureen Glabman |
Managed Care Makes It Tough For Some Hospitals To Stay Afloat True, there are other reasons the facilities have closed, but insurers' payment rates stand out. Is it better that some are history?  |
CIO February 1, 2003 Christopher Koch |
Off the Charts An electronic medical records system at the University of Illinois Medical Center did more than transform communication, it converted the least likely users into technology believers.  |
Managed Care May 2005 Frank Diamond |
Hospitals May See Plans as Their New Confidant Not only can health plans pay for performance, they can offer a mechanism for confidential discussions of mistakes.  |
Nursing Management September 2011 Sally Austin |
What does EMTALA mean for you? When a patient enters your hospital, do you know what your obligations are under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act?  |
Pharmaceutical Executive November 1, 2008 George Koroneos |
Tech Toys Here are the hottest gadgets and gizmos to make a dent in drug noncompliance.  |
Managed Care October 2000 Maureen Glabman |
Giving Some Ground to Physicians Helped Turn Health System Around One hospital system accepted the general wisdom a few years ago by acquiring physician practices. Now it bucks the new wisdom by holding on to them...  |
Managed Care October 2002 Pamela L. Popp |
How To -- And Not To -- Disclose Medical Errors to Patients Health care facilities and physician practices must commence development and implementation of a disclosure policy. The policy should include a statement of the need and willingness of the patient and physician to have an open and honest relationship and a constant dialogue.  |
Pharmaceutical Executive August 1, 2005 Lena Chow |
Docs of Shanghai They're short on status, pay, and respect, but China's young doctors hold keys to the world's fastest growing pharmaceutical market.  |
Fast Company May 2009 Chuck Salter |
The Doctor of the Future Cost, access, quality -- the prognosis for American health care may look grim, but innovation is the cure. The medicine of tomorrow is being born today.  |
BusinessWeek September 9, 2010 Bruce Einhorn |
In Asia, Public Health Care Gets Less Public Health-care policymakers in Asia are encouraging more affluent Asians to use private hospitals and their own funds.  |
AskMen.com Jon Skindzier |
The Everyman Dream Health Plan This article lays out a dream health care plan that has been composed of the best individual elements from different systems around the world. However, not all of it may be practical.  |
Fast Company March 2015 Julie Makinen |
Apricot Forest Fixes What Ails Chinese Health Care Apricot Forest offers a suite of three apps that aim to fix some of the core inefficiencies in China's medical system. Twenty-five percent of China's 2.5 million doctors now use at least one of the apps, as do about 2,000 new physicians every day.  |
Pharmaceutical Executive January 1, 2006 Gene Guselli |
Marketing to Professionals: The Power of Positive Feedback Boost doctors' confidence in your brand by validating their prescription decisions.  |