Precision Medicine

Also called personalized medicine, this evolving field makes use of an individual’s genes, lifestyle, environment and other factors to identify unique disease risks and guide treatment decision-making.

HIMSS16 Presentation Highlights the Role of Wolters Kluwer ProVation Order Sets in Standardizing Care During a Public Health Crisis

MINNEAPOLIS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Health division of Wolters Kluwer, a leading global provider of information and point of care solutions for the healthcare industry, announced today that Rabin Pant, director of clinical informatics with Methodist Health System, will present a session at HIMSS16 highlighting the critical role of effective point of care clinical content management during a public health crisis. The session titled “The Value of Standardized Care in a Public Health Crisis” will demonstrate how ProVation® Order Sets, powered by UpToDate® Decision Support enabled the organization to lay a foundation of highly-reliable, evidence-based clinical care during the health system’s response to the 2014 Ebola outbreak in Dallas.

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Researchers find few health apps useful for patient engagement

A review of more than 1,000 healthcare related-apps found that less than half appeared to be useful for their potential for patient engagement while also offering high quality and safety, according to an issue brief published by New York City-based The Commonwealth Fund.

eHealth Technologies Empowers Imaging Interoperability for CRISP

Partnership Enables the CRISP HIE Community Access to Medical Images.

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HIMSS16: Parkland hospital in Dallas features new technological capabilities

After more than seven years of planning, the Parkland Health and Hospital system in Dallas moved into a new campus in August. For vice president of IT Joseph Longo, the long wait presented a few major challenges, most notably that the technology lifecycle changed dramatically during that time period.

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5 ways to head off the approaching critical care crisis

The realities of 21st century healthcare economics are hacking away at the 20th century ideal of the intensive care unit as a single space housing the hospital’s sickest patients and marshaling, by cookie-cutter departmental structuring, the skills of intensivist physicians, specialized nurses and ICU-dedicated ancillary staffers.

Look out hospitals, the 'urgents’ are up and rising

Thanks to their low-cost, consumer-friendly character, urgent care centers are big and getting bigger. How much bigger? 

Report: Evidence-based care for elderly varies widely

Some aging patients spend nearly a month of the year in contact with the healthcare system, whether in the hospital, at a doctor’s office or at a lab visit, but still might not be receiving medical care that reflects evidence-based practices, according to a report from the Dartmouth Atlas Project.

AHIMA's new toolkit to increase focus on patient safety identifier

As part of its grassroots campaign to spur discussion about patient safety identifiers, AHIMA has released a new toolkit it hopes will be used to spread the word.

Around the web

The tirzepatide shortage that first began in 2022 has been resolved. Drug companies distributing compounded versions of the popular drug now have two to three more months to distribute their remaining supply.

The 24 members of the House Task Force on AI—12 reps from each party—have posted a 253-page report detailing their bipartisan vision for encouraging innovation while minimizing risks. 

Merck sent Hansoh Pharma, a Chinese biopharmaceutical company, an upfront payment of $112 million to license a new investigational GLP-1 receptor agonist. There could be many more payments to come if certain milestones are met.