Eric Wicklund
In a pair of announcements this week, a New York-based health system is rolling out several projects to scale up its telehealth offerings, while one of the nation's largest telehealth providers is partnering with a Massachusetts health plan on video visits.
A recent survey indicates physicians are feeling devalued and frustrated by the demands of imperfect EMRs and other technology, and mHealth is only seen as a long-term solution and a short-term headache. A online contest is seeking ideas to ease that misery.
The company's stock has plunged 80 percent since it went public a year ago, and analysts are wondering whether it can survive.
Calling Apple Watch "a comprehensive health and fitness companion," CEO Tim Cook said the device is "like having a coach on your wrist."
Advances in cognitive computing are giving clinicians access to a decision support tool that learns as it goes along.
The agency long known for regulating app releases its first, to help clinicians learn of a specific drug's availability and report any shortages.
An innovative new messaging system is designed to help self-insured business owners reduce accidents and workmen's comp claims -- and could find traction among payers as well.
The driving force behind HealthEnabled -- and the face of the mHealth Alliance for many years before that -- sees digital health making a difference in many parts of the globe.
Arising from the ashes of a catastrophic 2011 tornado, Mercy Hospital Joplin will be the latest example of the health system's many accomplishments in telehealth and mHealth technology.
A German study of elderly diabetics shows that they aren't using apps -- and have very specific reasons why they aren't.