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Bill Siwicki

By Bill Siwicki | 03:11 pm | September 07, 2018
The pregnancy app, developed in-house with some help, allowed the hospital to improve its OB-maternity HCAHPS by 68 percent and cut printing costs for paper handouts by half.
By Bill Siwicki | 12:57 pm | August 27, 2018
Indianapolis, Indiana-based Community Health Network wanted to up its hiring game.
By Bill Siwicki | 12:57 pm | July 19, 2018
Health Wizz has updated and is piloting its unusual blockchain- and FHIR-enabled EHR aggregator mobile app, which uses blockchain to tokenize data, enabling patients to securely aggregate, organize, share, donate and/or trade their medical records.
By Bill Siwicki | 04:08 pm | May 31, 2018
Riverside Medical Clinic is the largest physician-owned practice in California.
By Bill Siwicki | 05:25 pm | May 17, 2018
Vecna Technologies, a developer of patient self-service systems, has integrated its onsite patient check-in platform with Imprivata's PatientSecure identification technology.
By Bill Siwicki | 03:07 pm | April 17, 2018
Miramont Family Medicine, a group practice in Fort Collins, Colorado, has four offices with staff and patients in each location.
By Bill Siwicki | 04:35 pm | April 03, 2018
The American Academy of Family Physicians and virtual care technology vendor Zipnosis are embarking on a partnership that will offer a virtual healthcare platform to AAFP's 129,000 members.
By Bill Siwicki | 03:55 pm | March 27, 2018
Since October 2016, when it started using a new telehealth technology, ConcertoHealth has seen 73 percent of its new e-consults replace the need for patients to see specialists face-to-face.
By Bill Siwicki | 04:22 pm | March 12, 2018
A new study, sponsored by the US Department of Veterans Affairs, applied wearable biosensors to post-acute heart failure patients and deployed FDA-cleared analytics from vendor physIQ to detect vital sign anomalies.
By Bill Siwicki | 11:40 am | February 20, 2018
Google AI has made a breakthrough: successfully predicting cardiovascular problems such as heart attacks and strokes simply from images of the retina, with no blood draws or other tests necessary.