Workforce Development
HIMSS25
Isaiah Nathaniel, 2025 HIMSS Changemaker award recipient and Delaware Valley Community Health SVP and CIO, says his organization has always had bipartisan support and will continue delivering care to underserved populations.
HIMSS25
Healthcare leaders and clinical informaticists can help decide which digital tools are most useful and accessible for patients without being overwhelming, says Whende Carroll, clinical informatics advisor at HIMSS.
Before the technology piece, focus must be on how to train people on the up-and-coming AI tools and providing a policy that governs those tools and protecting data, says Dr. Zafar Chaudry, chief AI officer at Seattle Children's.
HIMSS25
Mayo Clinic project specialist informaticist AJ Paragon shares highlights to his upcoming HIMSS25 discussion on the combined power of informatics for clinics and nurses and the effect on provider collaboration to improve productivity.
HIMSS25
Brian Gonzalez and Dr. Sarah Hoffe of Moffitt Cancer Center highlight the VR-focused research they will discuss during their HIMSS25 talk in Las Vegas. They explain how the emerging technology has benefited their clinical research efforts.
Investing in the workforce, in the professional development of nurses, and in rewards and recognition helps retain nurses, says Scott Estep, system vice president for nursing operations and capacity management at OhioHealth.
HIMSS25
Because healthcare IT requires an enormous amount of late hours, a lot of travel and in-person meetings, work-life balance is a major challenge for women working in IT, says Jeffery Daigrepont, SVP of Coker Group.
A Singaporean startup is set to introduce its doctor companion AI across Australia and Southeast Asia starting this year.
AI and genAI can reduce paperwork and errors by automating tasks prone to human error like data entry, clinical documentation and billing, says Aashima Gupta, Google Cloud's healthcare vertical lead.
A lot of things are moving healthcare interoperability forward. The amount of progress that's been made even in the past 18 months is amazing and a lot of people are paying attention to it, says Dan Torrens, eHealth Technologies CEO.