Today's Top 20 Health IT Articles
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36 top hospital IT solutions, per Black Book Research
Black Book Research released a list of the top hospital technologies in 36 categories for 2024 as rated by industry customers. -
UnitedHealth investigating data leak from Change hack
UnitedHealth Group has confirmed that data has been compromised due to the Feb. 21 cyberattack on its subsidiary Change Healthcare. -
MyMichigan hospital spends $10M to install Epic
MyMichigan Medical Center Sault in Sault Ste. Marie is spending millions of dollars to install Epic across the hospital, according to The Sault News. -
Why Stanford expanded an AI co-pilot across the enterprise
Palo Alto, Calif.-based Stanford Health Care is expanding an artificial intelligence co-pilot to thousands of physicians to lighten their "cognitive load," a health system leader told Becker's. -
Epic + Oracle Health: What top execs plan for this year
Leaders from two of the largest EHR companies in the U.S. set ambitious goals for the coming months related to artificial intelligence, interoperability and business growth. How do they compare? -
Optum promotes regional CIO
Optum promoted Rodney Plante to senior vice president and CIO of the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic regions. -
Health system's $10M stadium naming rights deal scrutinized
A California health system's $10 million stadium naming rights deal is under scrutiny at the same time its executive compensation is being questioned, the Fresno (Calif.) Bee reported. -
Health system inks 6-year sponsorship deal with MLB's Phillies
Jacksonville, Fla.-based Nemours Children's Health has inked a six-year sponsorship deal with MLB's Philadelphia Phillies. -
C-suite leaders aren't seeing eye to eye with CISOs
Sixty-six percent of chief information security officers said senior leadership doesn't understand their role within the organization, while 31% of C-suite executives admitted to struggling with understanding the tangible return on investment in cybersecurity, a March 26 survey from FTI Consulting found. -
UnitedHealth pays $3.3B to providers following Change hack
UnitedHealth Group said it has paid out more than $3.3 billion to providers affected by the Feb. 21 cyberattack on its subsidiary Change Healthcare, CNBC reported March 28. -
Northwell backs 'emotionally intelligent' AI voice startup
The venture capital arm of New Hyde Park, N.Y.-based Northwell Health is backing a startup that is developing a conversational artificial intelligence platform that mimics human speech. -
Digital health venture capital deals stagnate
Digital health deal values plummeted in 2023, even as the number of deals increased, according to Pitchbook. -
Oracle Health in the last 30 days
Oracle Health, which ranks No. 2 in U.S. hospital EHR market share, had a busy March. Here are seven headlines from the company formerly known as Cerner. -
R1 RCM reports data breach
R1 RCM has notified patients potentially affected by a cybersecurity incident that involved personal identifiable information and personal health information. -
CISA proposes rule for hospitals to disclose ransom payments
Hospitals and health systems may soon need to report a cybersecurity incident to the federal government within 72 hours and ransom payments within 24 hours. -
HHS unveils 5-year health IT strategic plan
HHS released its Federal Health IT Strategic Plan March 27, addressing the agency's plans to modernize national public health data infrastructure and promote interoperability with EHRs. -
AI expertise gets more expensive as hospitals bulk up
Health systems are evaluating the best strategy for integrating artificial intelligence into the broader organization, which sometimes means bringing on additional AI expertise. -
Mayo embraces 'citizen development' for AI
Rochester, Minn.-based Mayo Clinic is taking a different approach with AI and is leaning into its clinicians so that they can develop their own AI capabilities, MITSloan reported March 27. -
Providence continues rebranding initiative
Renton, Wash.-based Providence has begun implementing new signage at Spokane, Wash.-based Providence Sacred Heart Medical Center and Children's Hospital, The Spokesman Review reported March 26. -
What hospital-at-home leaders can learn from hospitalists
To truly scale "hospital at home," its leaders should take a page from hospitalists, a similarly disruptive care model that grew exponentially, two physician leaders wrote in Health Affairs.
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