Today's Top 20 Health IT Articles
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How Mayo Clinic is using AI to identify heart abnormalities
Rochester, Minn.-based Mayo Clinic is using an artificial intelligence algorithm to identify a left ventricular cardiovascular disease that can go unnoticed until a serious cardiac event, the Post Bulletin reported Nov. 2. -
2 NYU Langone physicians suspended over social media posts on Israel, Hamas war
New York City-based NYU Langone Health has suspended two clinicians over social media posts related to the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas. -
Hospital associations sue HHS over pixel tracking ban
The American Hospital Association, the Texas Hospital Association and two health systems filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services over new guidance that prohibits hospitals and other healthcare providers from using tracking tools to monitor visitors on their websites. -
Kansas hospital helps residents recover medical records from nearby closed hospital
Abilene (Kan.) Memorial Health System is assisting patients with recovering their locked medical records from Herington (Kan.) Hospital, a nearby 25-bed critical access hospital that closed Oct. 9, Abilene-RC.com reported Nov. 2. -
The rise and fall of Olive AI: A timeline
Olive AI is no more. -
5 hospital, retail disruptor partnerships
Hospitals are partnering with retail and tech disruptors such as Walmart, Walgreens, Instacart, CVS Health and One Medical to expand access to care at retail locations. -
How 1 company aims to enhance physician security
Online networking service Doximity unveiled a new free service named DocDefender, which is designed to eliminate a physician's private phone numbers and addresses from publicly accessible websites. -
Emory Healthcare teams with digital health company on medication costs, adherence
Atlanta-based Emory Healthcare is partnering with digital health company DrFirst to use artificial intelligence and text messaging to improve patients' medication adherence and costs. -
8 ways CMIOs' responsibilities have changed, per survey
Nearly 8 in 10 chief medical information officers say they have taken on more responsibilities over the past two years, a new survey found. -
Broward Health invests $250M in Epic transition
Broward Health, based in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., is spending $250 million to transition to an Epic EHR system. -
Why Apple never got into health clinics
Tech giant Apple had aspirations to get into health clinics, Bloomberg reported Nov. 1. -
Apple's plan to reshape the healthcare industry
Apple's attempt to integrate health monitoring and disease prevention into its top-selling products is how the tech giant aims to strategically position itself in the healthcare industry, Bloomberg reported Nov. 1. -
The drivers of the health information workforce shortage
Sixty-six percent of organizations have reported experiencing a health information workforce shortage in the last two years, according to an October survey from the American Health Information Management Association. -
Geisinger using AI to spot potential lung cancer
Danville, Pa.-based Geisinger is using an artificial intelligence-powered workflow system to identify patients with lung abnormalities for further screening. -
Walmart names 1st health system partner
Walmart Health has inked its first health system partnership. -
UPMC Hamot renames pediatric unit
Erie, Pa.-based UPMC Hamot has renamed its nine-bed pediatric unit to UPMC Children's at UPMC Hamot. -
Walgreens Boots Alliance names new CIO
Walgreens Boots Alliance has named Neal Sample as its new CIO and executive vice president. -
3 fallen healthcare unicorns
Despite the $1 billion valuation, not all healthcare unicorns have been able to find long-term success. Becker's has reported on RCM, physician services and digital healthcare unicorns that have shut down or filed for bankruptcy. -
Life sciences company appoints new exec
Life sciences and diagnostics company Danaher appointed Christopher Riley as executive vice president for biotechnology. -
HHS reaches $100K ransomware settlement with healthcare org
Doctors' Management Services, a medical management company based in West Bridgewater, Mass., agreed to pay HHS and the Office for Civil Rights a $100,000 settlement due to a ransomware attack that affected the protected health information of 206,695 individuals, marking the first ransomware agreement OCR has made.
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