Three notes:
1. On April 30, Imprivata rolled out the first phase of the project, which features single-sign-on access for clinical workstations and mobile devices connected to Microsoft Azure.
2. Imprivata’s Healthcare Seamless SSO allows clinical and nonclinical Microsoft Azure users to use the health IT company’s tap-in and tap-out capabilities, which grant badge tap access into Microsoft Officer 365 and other applications connected to Microsoft’s cloud-based applications.
3. Imprivata has more than 1,940 healthcare customers, which will have access to the new cloud platform, Imprivata President and CEO Gus Malezis said in a news release emailed to Becker’s Hospital Review.
More articles on health IT:
Microsoft data breach targeted cryptocurrency users
Viewpoint: Personal health records would increase interoperability among providers
Viewpoint: How new technology could cure tech-related physician burnout