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Eric Wicklund

By Eric Wicklund | 11:42 am | March 26, 2014
Bolstered by $3.2 million in venture funding, Augmedix looks to market Google Glass as a tool for doctors looking to have that "humane, high-touch" interaction with the patient that they've always wanted.
By Eric Wicklund | 12:51 pm | March 25, 2014
Often overlooked by IT, nurses are already using mobile technologies for communication and clinical services more than was previously thought. And that means they hold great promise to improve care coordination and delivery.
By Eric Wicklund | 08:19 am | March 24, 2014
The TeleHealth International Partnership (TIP) brings together some big names to propel telemedicine as an accepted standard of healthcare in the US and abroad.
By Eric Wicklund | 08:15 am | March 24, 2014
Buoyed by the success of Sensiotec and EarlySense, the monitoring solutions look to vault over the barriers faced by wearable and attached sensors.
By Eric Wicklund | 04:07 pm | March 20, 2014
A report from Germany-based Research2Guidance, finds that 14 app developers - many of them small innovators - control 65 percent of the mobile app market for diabetes. Here's what that means.
By Eric Wicklund | 02:24 pm | March 19, 2014
A bipartisan group of senators has penned a letter - complete with specific questions they want answered - asking the FDA to be more transparent in how it would regulate mobile medical apps.
By Eric Wicklund | 09:21 am | March 18, 2014
Two apps designed to help patients feel more comfortable win the top prizes in a weekend-long contest sponsored by NewYork-Presbyterian.
By Eric Wicklund | 11:13 am | March 17, 2014
When Oakwood Healthcare revamped its website last year, officials realized they needed a much more engaging mobile presence. Here's what they did to get front-and-center in the competitive Michigan market.
By Eric Wicklund | 12:01 pm | March 12, 2014
From standing-room-only sessions on privacy and security to the latest in wearable sensors, mHealth made its mark at this year's HIMSS 14 conference.
By Eric Wicklund | 12:46 pm | March 11, 2014
A mobile gaming platform developed at Harvard Medical School is being used in health systems across the country to educate staff on issues ranging from patient safety to identifying delirium.