As an emergency physician, I’ve been deeply impressed by the medical community’s response to the crisis conditions imposed by the COVID-19 global pandemic. Doctors and nurses have heroically responded to the call, and health systems have revised processes and deployed new technologies to allow clinicians to focus on their top priority: delivering patient care.
The COVID-19 crisis has served as a powerful reminder about the optimal role of healthcare technology: it is most valuable when it helps save clinicians time.
Impact of technology on clinical efficiency unquestioned, with users citing Imprivata’s track record of customer success and high level of partnership as key drivers to deep platform implementation
Cybercriminals across the globe continue to target healthcare organizations, exploiting any vulnerability they can. Healthcare organizations are still struggling to protect themselves against these hackers, whose tactics are getting more sophisticated by the day.
Read the full article at medicalbuyer.co.in
In Is the Quality Payment Program the most disruptive feature of MACRA?, two different provisions of the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA) were compared, considering which might actually be more disruptive to healthcare stakeholders.
Report from CHIME Digital Health Most Wired, in partnership with Imprivata, finds just 15% of healthcare organizations view cross-functional alignment as the first step in enabling a successful digital transformation plan.
The company’s single sign-on and identity governance solutions helped Health and Social Care (HSC) Trust onboard 500 personnel in under 25 minutes to operationalize vaccine delivery amid COVID-19 health crisis.
In August, Imprivata published its 2013 Desktop Virtualization Trends in Healthcare report, the company’s third-annual survey about the adoption rates and benefits of desktop virtualization (as well as cloud-based applications and services) in healthcare.
A quick look around at the vendors exhibiting at the VMworld 2013 conference in San Francisco this week seems to confirm the belief that the move to cloud computing is inevitable (a notion supported by a number of different studies).