The Buzz (1422)
Mayo Clinic Launches Pregnancy App
The Mayo Clinic has launched a new mobile app. So reports Healthcare IT News.
Read more...24 Percent of Docs Use Mobile Apps
A new survey by Wolters Kluwer Health shows that 24 percent of the doctors surveyed use mobile apps. So reports Fierce Mobile Healthcare.
Read more...Milwaukee Clinic Loses Access to Patient Records
Physicians at Milwaukee Health Services have lost access the medical records of 40,000 patients. So reports the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
Read more...EHR Incentive Payments Reach $9.3B
The latest statistics released for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services show that $9.3 billion dollars of incentives have been paid out since the program began. So reports Government Health IT.
Read more...Spine Clinic Employee Steals 532 Patient’s Info
An employee of the Rocky Mountain Spine Clinic stole patient health information. So reports the Denver Post.
Read more...Patients Want Apps More Than Prescriptions: Study
- Thursday, 18 July 2013
- The Buzz
- Written by Jennifer Flaten
A new survey by Digitas Health, a healthcare marketing and advertising agency, found that 90% of patients would accept the offer of a mobile app, reports Fierce Mobile.
Read more...Big Drop in Meaningful Use Attestation
- Thursday, 18 July 2013
- The Buzz
- Written by Jennifer Flaten
A new report published by the CMS shows that of the 11,578 family physicians who attested to meaningful use in 2011, only 9,188 did so in 2012. That amounts to a 21% drop in participation, reports the AAFP.
Read more...Nat’l Coordinator for Health Offers Certification Mark
- Thursday, 18 July 2013
- The Buzz
- Written by Jennifer Flaten
The Office of the National Coordinator now offers a mark for electronic health records and other health IT products.
Read more...Penn. Healthcare Groups Exchange Patient Data
- Thursday, 18 July 2013
- The Buzz
- Written by Jennifer Flaten
Two Pennsylvania medical offices now have interoperability.
Read more...Twitter Helps Track Food Related Behavior
An article published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research suggests that subjects using Twitter on their mobile devices are better able to capture their real-time food consumption and diet related behavior, reports Fierce Mobile Healthcare.
Read more...Most Read
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Jan 07 2009
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Written by News
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Feb 16 2009
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Written by Scott Koegler
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Feb 18 2008
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Written by Karen Corey
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Apr 30 2010
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Written by Jennifer Flaten
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