Technology can help our healthcare system overcome persistent challenges and reach new heights in care delivery.
We believe the future of healthcare includes a care environment that enables personalized, human-centered care.
The only way to achieve this is with a Smart Hospital Platform powered by artificial intelligence (AI).
Healthcare has reached its tipping point.
Unprecedented burnout, growing economic pressures, and declining productivity only add fuel to the fire, forcing the industry toward a fundamental shift in how it operates in order to survive.
The state of healthcare affects everyone, from individual patients and provider teams to payers and entire communities.
A new standard for the smart hospital will create a positive ripple effect through the ecosystem.
For the U.S. healthcare system to survive, the industry needs a fundamental shift in how we approach healthcare delivery.
Every stakeholder — organizational leaders, clinicians, team leads, regulators, compliance organizations, and certification entities — must recognize that change is necessary for survival, each doing their part to make it happen.
Healthcare does not have enough clinicians now — and will not for the foreseeable future. The clearest path to solving this is to reduce waste. The U.S. healthcare system has a $750 M opportunity to address failures of care delivery, care coordination, and low-value care.
Task-oriented documentation, in particular, needs immediate remedy. The “if you don’t document it, it didn’t happen,” approach falls short, resulting in latent, inaccurate, and incomplete information.
Data is the lynchpin to measure outcomes and solve problems, but clinicians cannot afford additional steps to get this information; we must redesign our workflows to achieve true care transformation.
It’s time for healthcare systems to embrace a different mindset: real-time documentation and monitoring that happens via voice and video capture.
It’s time for healthcare systems to embrace a different mindset: real-time documentation and monitoring that happens via voice and video capture.
Data is the lynchpin to measure outcomes and solve problems, but clinicians cannot afford additional steps to get this information; we must redesign our workflows to achieve true care transformation.
Healthcare does not have enough clinicians now — and will not for the foreseeable future. The clearest path to solving this is to reduce waste. The U.S. healthcare system has a $750 M opportunity to address failures of care delivery, care coordination, and low-value care.
Task-oriented documentation, in particular, needs immediate remedy. The “if you don’t document it, it didn’t happen,” approach falls short, resulting in latent, inaccurate, and incomplete information.
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Healthcare does not have enough clinicians now — and will not for the foreseeable future. The clearest path to solving this is to reduce waste. The U.S. healthcare system has a $750 M opportunity to address failures of care delivery, care coordination, and low-value care.
Task-oriented documentation, in particular, needs immediate remedy. The “if you don’t document it, it didn’t happen,” approach falls short, resulting in latent, inaccurate, and incomplete information.
It’s time for healthcare systems to embrace a different mindset: real-time documentation and monitoring that happens via voice and video capture.
It’s time for healthcare systems to embrace a different mindset: real-time documentation and monitoring that happens via voice and video capture.
Healthcare does not have enough clinicians now — and will not for the foreseeable future. The clearest path to solving this is to reduce waste. The U.S. healthcare system has a $750 M opportunity to address failures of care delivery, care coordination, and low-value care.
Task-oriented documentation, in particular, needs immediate remedy. The “if you don’t document it, it didn’t happen,” approach falls short, resulting in latent, inaccurate, and incomplete information.
Healthcare does not have enough clinicians now — and will not for the foreseeable future. The clearest path to solving this is to reduce waste. The U.S. healthcare system has a $750 M opportunity to address failures of care delivery, care coordination, and low-value care.
Task-oriented documentation, in particular, needs immediate remedy. The “if you don’t document it, it didn’t happen,” approach falls short, resulting in latent, inaccurate, and incomplete information.