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Attending HIMSS17?
We’re throwing our customers the party of the year on Tuesday, February 21 and you don’t want to miss it! Watch the video below to learn more about how you can #TangoToMangos at #HIMSS17.
Follow Imprivata for updates on Twitter, @Imprivata and #TangoToMangos.
“Inspire, equip, and develop leadership talent”Imprivata’s fifth Leadership Development Program (LDP) kicked off earlier this year. The LDP is a customized program developed to foster growth and invest in Imprivata’s current and future leaders. Imprivata sees this program as both an investment in employees and in Imprivata. This program is designed to build the next generation of leaders and has been extremely impactful to date, with several participants being promoted to new roles, moving to new groups, or expanding into more senior positions.
How does a nearly 2,000-bed healthcare system that sees an average of 15,000 people a day deal with the inefficiencies that come with prescribing controlled substances on paper? Tired of dealing with issues that cause daily legal and ethical risks for healthcare systems, including dual prescribing workflows, patient safety concerns, and an increased risk of fraud and forged prescriptions, Hartford HealthCare recently chose to implement Imprivata Confirm ID for electronic prescription of controlled substances (EPCS).
Massachusetts lawmakers recently passed legislation that requires providers and pharmacies to switch to electronic prescribing of opioid medication by 2020, further validating the significant role technology can play in combatting our national prescription drug abuse epidemic.
Passed by the Mass. state House of Representatives, the bill represents the latest legislative push to create a more secure opioid distribution chain by requiring that prescriptions for controlled substances be completed electronically.
Over the last decade, there has been increasing adoption of electronic health records (EHR) due to the digitization across healthcare organizations. However, every technology implementation comes with opportunities for mistakes, such as outdated IT systems and poorly designed user interfaces, which can lead to EHR deployment failures. Studies show that 75% of physicians, providers, and practice administrators haven’t seen a return on their EHR investment.
It’s a big week in Barcelona as Thin and Zero Client Manufacturers display their innovative solutions throughout Citrix Synergy 2012.
In the case of a OneSign implementation, the answer may surprise you. New acquisitions / deployment of technology usually starts in the IT department; It’s one of the perks, right? They get all the new shiny gadgets and gizmos to play with and explore before deciding if it will work for the end users. This works great for a lot of technologies: iPads, the newest phones, a new email client, anti-virus software, disk encryption and a whole lot of other software and hardware.
For those of you still digging out of the blizzard from this past weekend and coping without power, heat and adequate parking, here’s one less thing to worry about: Imprivata has your health IT news covered!
This week, we’re following stories about IBM’s supercomputer being employed to help doctors, even more penalties for hospitals in the future (as if there weren’t enough!), and family physicians’ major head-start in EHR adoption.
What are you reading this week?
Have you ever wanted to have a face to face conversation with one of Imprivata's technical experts to discuss existing or future products, deployment strategies or upgrade options? Or perhaps you have the desire to discuss some other Imprivata-related topic that has been on your mind for a while?
Patient Safety Awareness Week - March 10–16 - is an annual event that brings patient safety into laser focus.But at Imprivata, ensuring patient safety is a constant. We believe that a critical component of patient safety is positively identifying patients and linking them to their correct medical record. Only then, clinicians can be confident that they are treating patients based on accurate and complete medical histories – in other words, safely.