After a busy year for digital health, four experts shared their predictions on which sectors will see the most M&A, and which companies are likely to get together in the future.
The health cloud is essential to supporting healthcare's ever expanding needs for storing, sharing and analyzing data — the lifeblood of the healthcare industry. Organizations can use it to transform patient experiences, to support analytics that would be too costly for conventional technology platforms.
This report highlights how healthcare organizations can use the cloud to scale up or down, data management options, and key questions that should be asked of health cloud vendors and enterprises so that reasonable expectations are mapped out to ensure the best match.
INVEST 2022 is going to be held March 28-30 in at the Ritz Carlton hotel in Chicago. This year, we have four new categories reflecting the pandemic-reality and how it has reshaped healthcare. Apply now for a chance to pitch LIVE in front of VC judges. Please note that companies that have pitched in the last 12 months at a MedCity event are ineligible to apply. Selected finalists will be asked to register for the conference at a reduced rate.
There will be more pilots and programs of value-based reimbursement contracts between payers and providers. The traditional fee-for-service model won't disappear for years to come, but there will be thoughtful pilots of reimbursement programs that reward providers for quality of care and clinical outcomes.
As in previous years, cancer products topped the list of new FDA-approved therapies in 2021. But the list of drug approvals is notable for other trends, including developments in rare diseases and regenerative medicine.
By Dr. Jonathan Kaplan Thursday, December 30, 2021 2:00 PM
While hospitals are slow to comply with the price transparency rules, full compliance will eventually mean hospitals provide "machine readable files" with thousands of lines of pricing data.
By Kelli Bravo Thursday, December 30, 2021 8:15 AM
In the post-pandemic world, care teams–from providers to insurers – must increase personalization and reduce complexity to empower consumers to engage more in their health and drive better care outcomes.
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