This article provides strategic analyses and recommendations to assist decision-makers in prioritizing opportunities for improving the post-pandemic patient journey. Addressed are changes that will likely become part of the “new” healthcare experience expected to emerge after the pandemic, including: The elevated priority of marketing and data’s role in driving outreach efforts Delivering on the scheduling …
Healthcare
Singaporeans are known to be hardworking workers. This may be a pattern we know too well – blurred lines between work and personal hours, replying to work messages on weekends, checking emails on vacations – particularly as flexible work arrangements and a technologically driven work culture (think smartphones and work chat groups) have become the …
As hospitals begin to define operations within the boundaries of COVID-19’s new normal, they’re taking a more proactive approach to manage critical events along with the often complex and diverse set of risks that occur daily. New insights gained from working on the frontlines of the pandemic are also shaping the path forward to create …
Fax technology in healthcare, and the associated workflow solutions, have evolved in parallel with the rest of the industry’s technological advancements. Today’s augmented intelligence solutions include artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning, and process automation. These technologies strengthen traditional fax communications and speed workflows, which naturally encourages more robust payer and provider collaboration. While paper fax …
Headlines on August 19, 2020 Protein structural insights chart the way to improved treatments for heart disease. A team including Wei Liu, assistant professor in ASU’s School of Molecular Sciences (SMS) and the Biodesign Institute’s Center for Applied Structural Discovery, has published a paper in Molecular Cell that offers promising details for improved treatments for …
Headlines on August 18, 2020 Potential drug target revealed to help more children survive a lethal heart defect. When children are born with hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS), they require a series of major surgical procedures to survive. But even with a repaired heart, as many as one in four children die from complications before …