The demand for jobs in cybersecurity is good. Students need to look at where they want to land and consider some career options, says Laquan Black, assistant professor of Health Information Technology at Guttman Community College CUNY.
Sunny Virmani, group product manager of health AI at Google, discusses expanding access to AI models for diabetic retinopathy in India and Thailand, AI’s potential to transform healthcare and Google’s plans for AI in healthcare in 2025.
Businesses have to be able to recover from that, says Heather Costa, director of technology resilience for the Mayo Clinic, who was formerly known as the director of disaster recovery.
Call centers are revenue-generating tools for healthcare facilities, rather than expense centers. AI can be used for workforce management to project volume fluctuations, says Yuriy Kotlyar, cofounder and CEO of American Health Connection.
HIMSS Healthcare Cybersecurity Forum reaffirms how cybersecurity can prevent disruption of patient care, says Ian Mack, IT senior security analyst for the University of Virginia and the communications chair for HIMSS Virginia Chapter.
Shana Hoffman, president & CEO at Lucet, says more behavioral utilization offsets medical expenses and improves quality of life. Her company helps connect members of health plans to behavioral healthcare providers.
Hiring a third party responsible for dropping a network inside a home that manages the network, devices and security, then leveraging a health systems' clinical expertise to deliver care, works, says Anahi Santiago, CISO at ChristianaCare.
URL information or FHIR endpoints should be moved into a TEFCA-based world, says Paul Wilder executive director at CommonWell Health Alliance, adding that setting up a universe of endpoints without a security mechanism and a framework doesn't work.
Paul Wilder, executive director at CommonWell Health Alliance, says voluminous amounts of data need to be replaced by discrete data that allows for better workflows that meet the needs of clinicians and patients.
David Miles, CIO of Oklahoma Heart Hospital, discusses how the all-digital healthcare system changed from a Cerner EHR to Epic - and the importance of peer assistance, resource availability and defined responsibilities during the process.