Business Intelligence
Todd Schlesinger, VP of business development at Jvion, says AI is already helping solve real-world challenges and improving patient outcomes.
Colin Tan, associate professor of ophthalmology at Duke NUS Medical School, says that while AI can help with recognizing patterns and diagnosis, physicians still need to use clinical judgment and manage the patient as a person.
DHA nurse Ashish Ann John describes how the agency is integrating devices and informatics with the EHR to improve experience for pediatric patients.
Machine learning can help organizations learn from data more quickly and intuitively, says Leonard D'Avolio, founder and CEO of Cyft.
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Kevin Shah, head of Enterprise New Business at Fujifilm Europe, explains how automating some processes can increase the chance of better outcomes for patients while reducing clinicians' workloads.
Rahul Goyal, MD, physician informatics lead at Mediclinic Middle East in the UAE, says EHR should be a useful tool as a "sidekick," not the be-all, for engaging physicians.
Badrul Husain, CEO of Infolytx, discusses how AI is gaining real traction across healthcare and the challenges ahead.
Blockchain can help eliminate "redundant work, rework and reconciliation," says Tej Anand, professor of practice at the University of Texas' McCombs School of Business.
Rob Wellen, regional vice president at KenSci, discusses how his company is helping providers operationalize machine learning and artificial intelligence.
Srinivasan Suresh, MD, VP at UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, says that it starts with engaging the clinicians and having a team to standardize care to reduce variation for measurable changes.
