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This Week in Health Tech

Author: Vik Patel, Johnathan Klaus, Jimmy Kim

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This Week in Health Tech podcast is a health technology podcast. Podcast features Vik Patel, a health technology veteran and CEO of Tido Inc. (A Trusted Tech Partner for Healthcare Organizations), Johnathan Klaus (healthcare clinical operations and strategy professional), and Jimmy Kim (a professional podcast host and producer). Our shows provide commentary, news, and perspective on the latest trends in health tech and features seasoned experienced industry experts. All of our shows are free. TWIHT is supported by advertising. We limit the number of ads on each show, and we only accept advertising from companies whose products or services benefit our audience.

56 Episodes
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In this episode of This Week in Health Tech episode, Vik welcomes Kevin Smith, AVP, Digital Health, Baptist Health.We focus on impact of AI in healthcare marketing. We start out talking about future AI phones and Google, Search Generative Experience SGE. Kevin provides some background of Baptist Health digital properties and how sites were amalgamated from every hospital having their own sites to centrally managed digital websites and apps. Vik and Kevin then dig into the HHS's highlighting concern last year for using Google Analytics for analytics since the information collected could be in violation of HIPAA. We discuss the impact of removing Google Analytics and how not having any tracking technologies is a huge gap and provides no insights into how the users are using the websites. Kevin also provides some options that they are looking into to replace Google Analytics. Then Kevin and Vik dig into how AI can be used in digital marketing starting with using AI in generating content, images, videos. Kevin also brings up AI policies and if there is a need to disclose use of AI and how do you do that. Maybe using content generation with AI won't work because it may not match the organization or the locality branding. Many times it is easy to see when content is AI generated because AI uses certain terms more than usual and does not seem natural.Vik and Kevin then discuss AI chatbots and is this something that could be used on a healthcare site? They discuss the pitfalls of AI chatbot and how the responses are not always trustable. Also what about sharing information with AI solutions and integration from EHR or other sources into the AI solutions. Kevin then lastly shares a tip for listeners that he has incorporated with his team. They have instituted some brainstorming time once a month that allows the team to use the time away from meetings to think of best use cases for AI, collaborate on these ideas. Hopefully a reset time for the team to come up with enhancements for existing and potentially new solutions. Guest Kevin Smith Contact Info:Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kevinbradleysmith/Listen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedInSupport the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
In this episode of This Week in Health Tech podcast, we welcome Barry Wallace, digital communications specialist at East Tennessee Children's Hospital. We start out by discussing a marketing / digital communications team structure and then content generation. Vik and Barry discuss if ChatGPT AI tools help with content generation. AI could give a starting point but at this point that is what it is, get ideas but not necessarily use AI for generating and publishing content without review. There is also legitimate concern because generative AI creates is not always accurate and it is called hallucination. Also AI may not represent the voice of that specific health system or marketing department. Barry and Vik then chat about social media and focus on Facebook, X formerly Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok. They chat about the best strategy for content on each of these platforms. Facebook still seems to be the #1 platform for their community reach. Vik then brings up Digital Transformation in healthcare  and how ETCH health system is handling this.  Guest Barry Wallace Contact Info: Linkedin: @barrywadewallaceEmail: barrywallace@yahoo.comTwitter: @barry_w_wallace Threads/Instagram: @barrywallaceTido Inc. The Trusted Tech Partner for Healthcare. We use technology to deliver better outcomes. Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
In this episodes of This Week in Health Tech, Vik and John discuss digital health strategy for healthcare organizations. They dive into different categories for digital health: virtual care, accessing health information, interoperability, innovation. For virtual care, organizations need to now consider remote patient monitoring on top of telehealth visits. This requires appropriate infrastructure updates to support  these remote monitoring apps. Vik and John discuss challenges associated with virtual care today. John and Vik then discuss interoperability updates required to support digital health and allowing different applications to easily access appropriate health information. We are way beyond the typical patient portal and there are many specialty apps which support patients with different conditions. They discuss FHIR APIs and the moving away from traditional way of integration where data was constantly pushed instead of being pulled seamlessly on demand. Vik and John then discuss innovative apps and AI-ML applications and how to manage-integrate all these new apps. They also discuss privacy-security updates required for digital health preparedness. Tido Inc. The Trusted Tech Partner for Healthcare. We use technology to deliver better outcomes. Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
In this episode of This week in Health Tech, Vik and John discuss HIMSS23 conference and insights gained at the conference. The main highlight at the conference was Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML). Vik and John discuss few AI implementations in Healthcare including Epic, Microsoft, Google, Nuance, and more. Website: http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.comTwitter: @TWIHT1Tido Inc.: https://www.tidoinc.com/Twitter: @TIDOINCLinkedin: Vik PatelTido Inc. The Trusted Tech Partner for Healthcare. We use technology to deliver better outcomes. Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
In this episode of This Week in Health Tech, Vik and John discuss healthcare financial challenges as they grapple with inflation, staffing shortages, and low margins. 85% of health system leaders expect staffing challenges to significantly impact 2023 strategies. Vik and John discuss how do you mitigate these challenges.  One way is to maximize operational efficiency with automation and digital tools that reduce workforce pressures, streamline handling of application and integration issues. These monitoring tools leverage real-time technology to drive improvements and minimize lost revenue!*** SPECIAL OFFER *** Free 6 Months End-To-End Applications and Integration Automated Monitoring Solution TrialTido Inc. The Trusted Tech Partner for Healthcare. We use technology to deliver better outcomes. Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
In this episode of This Week in Health Tech, we welcome Johnathan Klaus to cohost the episode. John is an experienced nurse and has worked in large academic medical center for many years in the cardiac department. He brings wealth of clinical knowledge to the team and we welcome him to cohost the podcast. Jimmy Kim is obviously still around and will be returning soon. In this episode we focus on freeing up clinical staff from diagnosing and reporting system issues  to focus on patients. This is a common scenario in health systems where clinical staff are required to not only pay attention to their patients, but also deal w/ system - application issues daily. It is such a common thing that many departments have come up with their own daily manual checks and manual checklist to diagnose issues and call the right vendor or helpdesk. This is a loss of productivity and also affects patient care. How do we avoid this? Listen to this episode to find how technical solutions can help w/ monitoring, detection, investigation, and remediation in a timely manner. Music by AudioCoffee from Pixabay.Tido Inc. The Trusted Tech Partner for Healthcare. We use technology to deliver better outcomes. Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
Vik and Jimmy focus on digital health and end-to-end monitoring of applications in this episode of This Week in Health Tech. Vik talks about strategy for digital transformation: managing digital apps, integrating digital apps, and supporting digital apps on an ongoing basis.Vik also mentions that healthcare organizations have requested not only automated monitoring but also 24/7 support to go along with the monitoring subscription.  Jimmy inquires about the 24/7 support and if it is actually supported by human support staff. Vik confirms that support is actual trained application and integration support team. But the support team is kept updated proactively about any issues using automated end-to-end monitoring. The automated monitoring is not true AI, but it is still using algorithms that are tweaked constantly by the monitoring team to enhance the solution and trigger notifications for issues without relying on users. Jimmy asks what would stop an organization from getting this end to end monitoring solution? Is it budget, processes, etc? Vik answers that all CIOs he has discussed this solution agree that it would really help the organization and keep IT helpdesk informed of issues proactively. But the main obstacle from purchasing this is budget and justifying such a new solution versus the more traditional projects that are on the books. Even though it is quite evident that the solution has huge ROI benefits by not relying on clinical professionals having to deal w/ issues. However most organization do not keep track of how much time clinicians spend on dealing w/ issues, so the actual calculation of ROI is based on estimates. This is where it becomes a bit of a struggle for CIOs to justify purchasing this solution to the healthcare CFO.Again, healthcare will adopt automated applications monitoring just like security and infrastructure monitoring, but it may take some time as it always done in healthcare. Linkedin: Vik PatelLinkedin: Jimmy KimWebsite: http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.comTwitter: @TWIHT1Tido Inc.: https://www.tidoinc.com/Music Provided by Soundstripe.comTido Inc.The Trusted Tech Partner for Healthcare. We use technology to deliver better outcomes.Support the showSupport the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
This episode of This Week in Health Tech focuses on one of the biggest tech conferences of North America, Collision Conference 2022. Collision attracts people from more than 125 countries and more than 35000 people. Vik shares the stories meeting the brightest minds in tech and innovative companies. Very different than the other healthcare tech conferences.  Crowd at the conference was definitely very mixed and pleasantly unexpected. Women in tech definitely represented in good numbers at the conference. The setup at the conference was laid out very well to help easier mingling of people. Tido Inc. was represented by four team members at the conference. It was great to talk to companies from other industries like fintech, gaming, and analytics. Pretty much every industry was well represented at the conference. Also tons of investors at the conference so great opportunity for startups to find investor partners and vice versa. We also cut into couple of interviews w/ other startup founders and share their thoughts about the conference.  Jimmy and Vik then discuss AI at the conference. Vik shares the experience from one of the presentations w/ basketball player Carmelo Anthony and digital Melo. Linkedin: Vik PatelLinkedin: Jimmy KimWebsite: http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.comTwitter: @TWIHT1Tido Inc.: https://www.tidoinc.com/Music Provided by Soundstripe.comTido Inc.The Trusted Tech Partner for Healthcare. We use technology to deliver better outcomes.Support the showTido Inc. The Trusted Tech Partner for Healthcare. We use technology to deliver better outcomes. Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
In this episode of This Week in Health Tech, Vik and Jimmy focus on keeping healthcare uninterrupted: 24/7 end to end monitoring of applications and integration between applications.  Vik and Jimmy start out with discussing working from home and hybrid working. Because of digital transformation and increasing number of mobile and web applications, it is becoming a bigger challenge for healthcare organizations to stay on top of desktop, web, and mobile application issues. Relying on manual reporting of issues is going to become an even bigger problem. Vik provides example of how issues in production environment impact patient care by discussing registration information flow from EHR to downstream applications. There are multiple points where there could be point of failure, end users may not get the right information at the right time. Helpdesk has limited knowledge of applications and they deal with a lot of access issues. and it is not practical for helpdesk team to understand every application and its functionality. Jimmy and Vik then discuss an example in ER, where technical application or integration issues may have a huge impact on patient outcomes. Manual monitoring is impossible in a healthcare environment to keep track of all the integrations and application functionality. Tido's end to end monitoring technology is constantly monitoring all applications and integrations to avoid reliance on manual intervention. Vik talks about the advantages of automated 24/7 end-to-end applications and integration monitoring and shares the experiences of using this technology at healthcare organizations. Jimmy asks about digital transformation impact on this applications monitoring. Vik indicates that digital transformation will have huge impact on how applications and interfaces are being monitored because organizations are adding mobile and web applications at an expedited rate. Healthcare organizations are also figuring out their digital transformation and app management strategy, which maybe a discussion point for another episode. Continuing to rely on manual reporting of issues is a risk that is going to become bigger as more and more applications are added to the mix. Vik thinks one of the main reason healthcare organizations are not using automated end-to-end applications and integration monitoring and keep relying on manual intervention because that is the status quo and that is how we have been doing it. Just because it has been done this way does not mean it is the right way of diagnosing and reporting issues. Vik talks about automated notifications and how the monitoring solution plugs into heldesk software and integration w/ Microsoft Teams to keep helpdesk team informed about application and integration issues. More Info on End to End Monitoring - https://tidoinc.com/tido-end-to-end-applications-monitoring/ Ep.  41 How to Improve Patient Safety With End to End (E2e) Systems Monitoring Linkedin: Tido Inc. The Trusted Tech Partner for Healthcare. We use technology to deliver better outcomes. Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
For the month of May, Vik and Jimmy are focusing on Healthcare Web, Mobile, EHR Testing and Test Automation.  In this part 1 episode, they focus on healthcare web properties testing and test automation strategies and implementation.Vik starts with the basics and defining testing and test automation and testing reality in healthcare. Testing is underrated and not something organizations think about but it should be a top priority, especially in these times when more and more online applications are used by patients and providers.Typically regression testing is missing because there are never enough test / qa resources in an organization. So there is limited testing in reality. Performance testing is usually not done and could be a potential user satisfaction issue if the website cannot handle web traffic, for example, a COVID scheduling or registration web application.Jimmy asks who is involved in website management at a healthcare organization. Vik explains that it is a combination of marketing and IT departments. Sometimes the roles are clear but usually, IT provides development resources, either in-house or outsourced. The marketing team in many cases is expected to do testing and user acceptance testing.Vik then explains the different categories of testing: Continuous, Automated, and Live Testing. Continuous testing is where testing is utilized at every stage of development. When test script development is complete,  then those scripts can be used for automated testing against hundreds of combinations of devices and browsers. Live testing is used by QA staff to test websites on real devices which are running in the cloud.Vik and Jimmy then use a real-life example of a COVID registration web application to discuss the different types of web application testing. Vik explains how the selenium test framework is utilized for test automation. Test scripts are written in any of the major programming languages: Java, Python, C#, Ruby, Kotlin, etc. He also explains how this automation works with a real device cloud to test the scripts against hundreds of combinations of devices and browsers. Jimmy and Vik then talk about types of testing: Functional, Compatibility, and Performance testing.They go into briefly about upcoming mobile and EHR testing in the next episodes of This Week in Health Tech. Website: http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.comTwitter: @TWIHT1Tido Inc.: https://www.tidoinc.com/Music Provided by Soundstripe.comSupport the show (http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.com/)Support the showSupport the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
In this episode of This Week in Health Tech, Vik and Jimmy chat about the latest health tech news including telehealth and in-person hybrid healthcare. Telehealth is not just a pandemic trend, and it is here to stay. Healthcare is increasingly hybrid with in-person and telehealth visits. At the beginning of the pandemic in 2019-2020, healthcare organizations were struggling with telehealth, however over the past 2 years, technology and workflows have matured. Telehealth experience has also improved over the 2 years as evident with Jimmy's own telehealth visits in 2020 versus the better experience in 2022. Vik and Jimmy then dive into the different payment models i.e. subscribtion or pay now or insurance for telehealth visits, and how insurance companies and Medicare-Medicaid pay for telehealth and how this may change in future. Jimmy and Vik then discuss the argument of if providers should get paid the same for in-person versus telehealth visits. The article discussed by Vik and Jimmy from HealthTechITNewshttps://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/telehealth-hybrid-future-mixed-person-care-and-mobile-devicesMetaverse Real Estate Article Mentioned in Today's Episodehttps://fortune.com/2022/02/02/how-to-buy-metaverse-real-estate-snoop-dogg-celebrity-neighbor/Website: http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.comTwitter: @TWIHT1Tido Inc.: https://www.tidoinc.com/Music Provided by Soundstripe.comLinkedin: Vik PatelLinkedin: Jimmy KimSupport the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
In this episode of This Week in Health Tech, first episode of 2022, Vik and Jimmy welcome Jared Johnson, from Healthcare Podcast Rap. Vik and Jimmy discuss hybrid healthcare or consumer first healthcare in this episode. Jared starts with explaining discussing what hybrid healthcare is with an example of 23 and me. He also mentions examples of Best Buy buying healthcare companies or even Walmart. How do you adapt as a CEO / CIO / CMIO of a traditional healthcare organization? Jared mentions that the margins are already lower in healthcare and how do you part w/ the little margin and partner w/ consumer brands. The group then discusses digital transformation and impact on consumer driven healthcare. Jared indicates that this is still the very beginning of consumer brands in healthcare. But as a healthcare executive, empathy will help understand the change of consumer driven healthcare. Vik then says that consumers are getting used to on-demand with example of uber and banking apps, so why not in healthcare. This is where asynchronous telehealth could also benefit consumers. The group then discusses machine learning and AI, and how it is becoming more accessible, and this allows more entrants or developers in healthcare. Plus w/ FHIR APIs, it allows app developers access to their own data. Jared mentions that partnerships w/ consumer brands in healthcare is still slow but it is happening. Vik mentions the example of the meditation app Calm and how it could be part of person's healthcare.Also Apple Health is connected with thousands of healthcare organizations and collects daily health information through apple watch.  Website: http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.comTwitter: @TWIHT1Tido Inc.: https://www.tidoinc.com/Music Provided by Soundstripe.comLinkedin: Vik PatelLinkedin: Jimmy KimGuest Information:Linkedin: Jared Johnson Health Care Rap Podcast on Apple Podcast Mentions: Calm AppApple HealthSupport the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
In this emergency episode of This Week in Health Tech, Vik and Jimmy discuss the big news of Oracle buying Cerner. The biggest purchase Oracle,  Big Tech, has ever done for $28.3 billion dollars.Vik and Jimmy first talk a little background of Oracle and Cerner.  Vik talks about Oracle products: cloud infrastructure, integration, oracle dbms, developer network, and more. Jimmy said this sends a huge signal that there is massive potential in healthcare.  Stock price has dropped initially because people are still trying to make sense of it. Plus there have been massive failures in the past like Microsoft HealthVault and Google HealthCloud. Vik thinks there will be growing pains in the beginning but over time once they figure out the best way to integrate Oracle and Cerner products. Vik thinks that one of the big opportunity is analytics and AI. Oracle will obviously use their cloud but the hidden opportunity is making sense of Big Data and use AI to make processes for health systems efficient and realize significant ROI. This could present a good opportunity to Cerner clients. Also sends a signal to Epic EHR, the EHR with biggest market in healthcare. The other thing is Oracle knows how to make products available to a developer network. Jimmy brings up the point that Cerner CEO is quite new and has been CEO only since Aug 2021. Maybe he was the right person to complete the deal. Website: http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.comTwitter: @TWIHT1Tido Inc.: https://www.tidoinc.com/Music Provided by Soundstripe.comLinkedin: Vik PatelLinkedin: Jimmy KimSupport the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
In this episode of This Week in Health Tech, Vik and Jimmy invite Dr. Laura Purdy, CEO and CoFounder of MD Integrations, All in One Telehealth solutions company. Dr. Purdy is a 15 year army veteran and started her career in military medical school and as a hospitalist in military. She realized early on that telehealth will be the future of healthcare for simple things such as poison ivy or pink eye. In the old days of telehealth, there were a lot of challenges from technical challenge to scheduling patients. Jimmy asks about asynchronous use of telehealth. Asynchronous is offline dialog and not real-time communication. Direct to consumer telehealth companies are at different stages of development. All of these companies have to deal with the same technical challenges including the portal and integration. This is where MD Integrations has an API which is designed for asynchronous telehealth.  One of the biggest pain points of telehealth is EMR. Today's EMRs are not designed for telehealth service, they are still designed for core brick and mortar services. Jimmy asks the question if asynchronous telehealth will increase over synchronous visits because patients do not prefer face to face visit if possible similar to other industries. Dr. Purdy explains the differences between the two and does think that asynchronous visits will continue to increase over face to face telehealth visits. The numbers are showing decrease in synchronous or real-time telehealth visits. On-demand healthcare is the future and asynchronous is able to assist w/ the same. Dr. Purdy provides examples of asynchronous use and why face to face call does not always make sense. Vik then asks why there are so many niche telehealth companies springing up when there are telehealth giants such as Teledoc and Livingo.  Dr. Purdy explains in detail the reason behind need for niche telehealth companies and why this market does not need to depend only on the telehealth giants. The group then jumps in the integration challenges related to Telehealth and how to overcome challenge of access to data from health system, clinic, telehealth portals. Website: http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.comTwitter: @TWIHT1Tido Inc.: https://www.tidoinc.com/Music Provided by Soundstripe.comLinkedin: Vik PatelLinkedin: Jimmy KimGuest Information:LinkedIn: Dr. Laura PurdyWebsite: https://mdintegrations.com/Support the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
In this Halloween special of This Week in Health Tech, Vik and Jimmy discuss digital transformation and AI with guest Shelby Sanderford, CEO of Docpace. Shelby shares her story of how she got started in healthcare IT working in a hospital. They are on a mission to eliminate wait times for patients and eliminate need for waiting rooms. The group dives into the conversation w/ impact of the pandemic on digital transformation in healthcare. Shelby notes that last few years healthcare organizations have been switching to electronic health records and applications, but in the last couple of years, it has been the acceptance of those applications. All these applications have almost become a necessity instead of a luxury. Vik agrees and adds that there is also an increased expectation from patients to use digital apps for personal healthcare. This is why Tido Inc.'s digital team is increasingly working w/ healthcare organizations on app strategy and management. Jimmy asks the question what kept Shelby going with all the challenges of pandemic. Shelby answers that the main reason is the justification that the problem exists so even with all the challenges, it helped to know that Docpace could solve some of those issues with wait times. Vik adds that some of these expectations are related to "On Demand" expectation of consumers. Shelby adds that healthcare is shifting to more proactive care instead of reactive care. Pre COVID, most consumers and healthcare organizations were okay with status quo but Post COVID, healthcare organizations are realizing that they need to meet the new expectations from consumers. Vik notes that executives are now realizing that they need to be prepared for this coming onslaught of apps because the basic patient portal is not enough and does not provide a customized experience for consumers. Shelby adds that the seamless integration will definitely be the key for healthcare organizations to take advantage of the innovation and new applications. Vik agrees that with FHIR interoperability, it will enable on demand healthcare with easy and secure pull of the patient information. The fragmentation in healthcare is gradually going away and FHIR APIs will play a crucial role in reducing fragmentation in healthcare. The group then moves to discussing AI in healthcare. Shelby explains the difference in automation and AI. Vik notes that lot of times the details about underlying algorithm, comparison data used etc. is unknown. As Dr. Oliver, CMIO, Baptist, said in the past episodes, lot of times the AI functionality is a black box and could affect the trust factor of an application. Website: http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.comTwitter: @TWIHT1Tido Inc.: https://www.tidoinc.com/Music Provided by Soundstripe.comLinkedin: Vik PatelLinkedin: Jimmy KimLinkedIn: Shelby SanderfordSupport the show (http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.com/)Support the show (http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.com/)Support the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
In this episode of This Week in Health Tech, Vik and Jimmy discuss healthcare systems monitoring and integration. In today's healthcare, we are still dependant on users to identify and report system issues. This is a big patient safety issue. Vik explains the issue in detail using an example. Patient arrives in emergency department, and based on the patient state, physician orders few different tests. In this case, physician orders lab, cardiology, and radiology tests. Lab and Cardio tests are processed successfully, and are visible to the users in those respective departments. PACS system however is experiencing some issue, and even though the order messages were received successfully through the interface, the orders still did not show up in the PACS system. So after close to an hour, the emergency department calls up radiology to find out the status of the tests and when the procedure will be done. This is when PACS admin or user realizes that there might be an issue and they will contact IT department or open a task using online task reporting system. This is when the IT help desk contact integration analyst to look into the issue, but this example show the reliance on manual intervention to find system issues is very risky and could lead to adverse patient events.This is where end to end systems monitoring comes into place. If the health system did have end to end systems monitoring in place, the active monitoring would have detected the exact location of the fault and cut down time to find and diagnose system issues. Plus it prevents reliance on users to report issue. With digital transformation number of systems and applications will continue to increase, and CIOs-CMIOS should really consider active monitoring to improve patient safety and prevent unscheduled downtimes. It is about being active instead of being reactive when dealing w/ system issues.Also, with Tido's Systems end to end monitoring, it does not stop at flagging and diagnosing the issue, but there is also well defined notifications mechanism to alert the appropriate staff members of a system issue. Jimmy asks the question, why health systems have not considered this until now? Vik explains that EHR and more electronic systems have been implemented everywhere only in the last 10-15 years. Plus applications have matured and reliance on electronic systems in health systems has increased and it will continue to increase. So it is the right timing now to implement active end to end systems monitoring. Vik then explains the end to end systems monitoring architecture and software: how it works with interface engine and EHR and downstream systems. There is also significant ROI from using automated end to end systems monitoring. All the time saved by staff members not spending their time dealing with system issues and instead of focusing on patient care is huge savings for a health system. Plus it improves patient outcomes. Tido has a deal for 6 months free end to end systems monitoring for health systems. Claim this deal by visiting tidoinc.com: https://tidoinc.com/contact-tido-inc/ and include E2E in your message. Tido's solution uses Microsoft Azure cloud for end to end systems monitoring.  Website: http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.comTwitter: @TWIHT1Tido Inc.: https://www.tidoinc.com/Music Provided by Soundstripe.comLinkedin: Support the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
In this jam-packed episode of This Week in Health Tech, we welcome Dr. Brett Oliver (Chief Medical Information Officer, Baptist Health) to dive into several fascinating topics, such as the future of telehealth, digital transformation, interoperability, cultural change across the industry, and much more.To kick it off, we discuss the latest COVID situation in Kentucky and the strain that it’s putting on healthcare. Jimmy asks Brett about remote monitoring and remote visits with patients. Brett indicates that Baptist is improving remote visits, with multi-specialty appointments now possible with better technology. Baptist has also been able to expand clinical content and recommendations that are provided to patient.Patients are ready for this cultural shift to eVisits and online healthcare experiences—so healthcare organizations need to adapt fast, and the culture change discussions have to happen now. Yet this new technology also needs to be user-friendly for patients. If not rolled out properly, the industry could go from a very basic experience to a very overwhelming experience—where patients have to choose from hundreds of different digital options. This would defeat the purpose of digital transformation: to make things better and more simple for patients.Additionally, the challenge of data silos is where interoperability is still one of the biggest challenges in healthcare. Patients own their healthcare data; however, it is still not easy for patients to access and share their data with new providers or health systems. CMS / ONC are pushing for better interoperability, which will definitely help overcome these data silos in healthcare.Vik and Brett then close the podcast by discussing how conversations with executive or physician teams are essential for effective digital transformations, as well as some final thoughts about the status of artificial intelligence in the healthcare sector.Website: http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.comTwitter: @TWIHT1Tido Inc.: https://www.tidoinc.com/Music Provided by Soundstripe.com Linkedin: Vik PatelLinkedin: Jimmy KimLinkedin: Dr. Brett OliverTido's Integration PackagesSupport the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
In this episode of TWIHT, Vik and Jimmy comment on HIMSS 2021 Conference that just ended Aug 12. This year the conference was in person in Las Vegas and was also available digitally online. Number of participants was low this year because of the pandemic, and it seemed like instead of the usual 50 to 60 thousand registrants, 2021 conference only had about 18000 registrants. Many of them attended digitally. Vik explains the importance of this conference and what it means for the healthcare information technology conference. Vik mentions that he attended the conference digitally this year and experience of attending digitally did not compare well to in person. Jimmy asks about the digital experience, and Vik explains that even though the app tried to facilitate the communication through the app, the experience could have been much better. Number of digital sessions were limited and there were fewer opportunities to connect in digital sessions. There was a way to view the directory of participants and reach out to people, however, that is probably not the best way to connect with people. Vik then answers Jimmy question about which topics were really the hot topics in this year's conference. Vik comments that the biggest topic was interoperability because of digital transformation in healthcare. The president of HIMSS indicated that with value based care and personalized care, it made sense for organizations to invest in the right strategies and technologies to enable integration between EHR, hospitals, and  innovative applications to provide the best experience for patients. Website: http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.comTwitter: @TWIHT1Tido Inc.: https://www.tidoinc.com/Music Provided by Soundstripe.comLinkedin: Vik PatelLinkedin: Jimmy KimTido's Integration PackagesSupport the show (http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.com/)Support the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
In this episode of Digital Transformation acceleration with APIs, Vik and Jimmy discuss the basics of API and its impact on digital transformation in health systems.The biggest factor for talking about APIs in healthcare is digital transformation. COVID has accelerated digital transformation in healthcare, it started with telehealth, but it is way beyond just telehealth: increased use AI and machine learning, patient or provider facing mobile apps, analytics, and remote monitoring. As a CIO or CEO of a health system,  you need to be ready for digital transformation.Healthcare has been working on digital transformation however COVID has expedited and pushed health systems to make changes, plus the government is also pushing digital transformation with CURES Act.Vik and Jimmy use examples from other industries to show user experiences are way better compared to healthcare.From a CIO standpoint, it starts with strategy, to enable digital transformation, you need to make it easier for data sharing for AI, Machine Learning, mobile apps, remote monitoring. And API is the way to go compared to the traditional way of integration. Vik and Jimmy then dive into specifics about strategy and use a practical example to explain how APIs need to be implemented.APIs also help realize significant ROI (return of investment) over traditional integration because of reduced resource time for implementation.Vik and Jimmy then dive into on-premise vs cloud for API implementations. Vik explains using FHIR specification for healthcare APIs.Vik explains the competitive advantage of having APIs to enable better user experiences.Website: http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.comTwitter: @TWIHT1Tido Inc.: https://www.tidoinc.com/Music Provided by Soundstripe.comLinkedin: Vik PatelLinkedin: Jimmy KimSupport the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
In this episode of TWIHT, we discuss how to actively monitor hospital systems data integrity. It is a big challenge to monitor hundreds of systems in a health system to ensure workflows and data are working as expected. This prevents having to rely on users to report issues and prevent extensive downtime. Vik describes a typical scenario in how most issues are dealt with today in a health system. He uses an example of an ED system. A user in emergency department places a lab order and if there is an issue with getting the result back, after waiting for 20-30min, the user then will report the issue to information technology help desk. Help desk will then message the integration team so they can check if the issue is with the result interfaces. Integration engineer will check the interfaces and then determine if there is an issue or not. By this time it is already 45-60min. Once integration team determines it is not an issue with interfaces, then they will open a task with the ED system vendor because at this point it is clear that there is some other issue with displaying the result in the ED system. This example shows that in health systems today, there is no automated process to prevent system issues and prevent long unscheduled downtimes which affect patient care. With an automated hospital systems data monitoring, within a min, an issue can be identified, and process of notifying the right parties can start immediately. This way a fix can be in place as soon as possible to minimize system downtime and avoid adverse patient events because of system issues. This problem of avoiding system issues has been in place for a long time, and it is challenging to actively monitor workflows and data integrity within 100s of hospital systems, however, our team at Tido Inc. has developed an active monitoring application to help identify issues instantly. Relying on users to report issues in all electronic systems is a very frustrating issue for care providers and instead of focusing on patient care, they are having to deal with system issues.  Vik provides another example where because of a workflow change in the EMR system, how it can affect downstream systems. EMR and hospital systems test automation can help avoid these issues (check last episode for more details), however, even test automation cannot guarantee avoidance of issues in live environment. This is where active systems integrity monitoring can catch issues before they turn into longer downtimes or affect patient care because of missing critical data. Website: http://www.thisweekinhealthtech.comTwitter: @TWIHT1Tido Inc.: https://www.tidoinc.com/Music Provided by Soundstripe.comLinkedin: Vik PatelLinkedin: Jimmy KimTido Inc. The Trusted Tech Partner for Healthcare. We use technology to deliver better outcomes. Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showListen to all This Week in Health Tech episodesVik Patel - LinkedInTido Inc. - WebsiteTido Inc. - LinkedIn
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