Eight ways in which AI is transforming healthcare
AI has been at the forefront of the medical profession’s efforts to fight Covid-19 and treat patients during the coronavirus pandemic. Enabling healthcare providers to
AI has been at the forefront of the medical profession’s efforts to fight Covid-19 and treat patients during the coronavirus pandemic. Enabling healthcare providers to
For many CIOs, the switch from the public sector to the private sector has seemed like a move that is too big to make comfortably.Â
The real test for AI systems will depend on the solution’s ability to integrate with the hospital or doctors’ workflow. And like any new-age tech,
While Facebook and Cambridge Analytica are hogging the spotlight, data brokers that collect your information from hundreds of sources and sell it wholesale are laughing
Blockchain has the potential to transform healthcare in general and the pharmacy supply chain in particular. The distributed ledger technology could offer legislative, logistical and
Apple and Aetna have been in talksto provide Aetna’s book of members with free or subsidized Apple Watches. Although there is plenty of speculation about
Healthcare costs are driving the demand for big data-driven healthcare applications. Technology decision-makers in healthcare systems can’t ignore the increased efficiencies, the attractive economics, and
In the last few decades as we become inundated with information from multiple sources and on virtually everything, the challenge is to organize the information
The$5 trillion health ecosystem in the U.S. is in a position for emerging technologies to disrupt the industry, according to recent reports. In today’s connected world,
Antibiotics that once cured ailments across the spectrum are now turning into a potential source of prolonged illness, disability and death. The world is transitioning
Every day in the U.S., there are about 650,000 opioid prescriptions dispensed, 3,900 people who begin abusing opioids, and 78 deaths from opioid-related overdoses. There
Your medical data is for sale – all of it. Adam Tanner, a fellow at Harvard’s institute for quantitative social science and author of a